| Literature DB >> 24098868 |
Raquel E Reinbolt1, John L Hays.
Abstract
Gynecologic malignancies annually account for over 91,000 new cancer cases and approximately 28,000 deaths in the United States. Although there have been advancements in cytotoxic chemotherapies, there has not been significant improvement in overall survival in these patients. While targeted therapies have shown some benefit in many solid tumors, further development of these agents is needed for the treatment of gynecologic malignancies. Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) catalyzes the polyADP-ribosylation of proteins involved in DNA repair. Inhibitors of PARP were originally developed for cancers with homologous recombination deficiencies, such as those harboring mutations in BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes. However, pre-clinical research and clinical trials have suggested that the activity of PARP inhibitors is not limited to those with BRCA mutations. PARP inhibitors may have activity in cancers deficient in other DNA repair genes, signaling pathways that mitigate DNA repair, or in combination with DNA-damaging agents independent of DNA repair dysfunction. Currently there are seven different PARP inhibitors in clinical development for cancer. While there has been promising clinical activity for some of these agents, there are still significant unanswered questions regarding their use. Going forward, specific questions that must be answered include timing of therapy, use in combination with cytotoxic agents or as single-agent maintenance therapy, and whether there is a predictive biomarker that can be used with PARP inhibition. Even with large strides in the treatment of many gynecologic malignancies in recent years, it is imperative that we develop newer agents and methods to identify patients that may benefit from these compounds. The focus of this review will be on pre-clinical data, current clinical trials, and the future of PARP inhibitors in the treatment of ovarian, endometrial, and cervical cancer.Entities:
Keywords: PARP inhibitor; cervical cancer; endometrial cancer; niraparib; olaparib; ovarian cancer; rucaparib; veliparib
Year: 2013 PMID: 24098868 PMCID: PMC3787651 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2013.00237
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Inhibition of PARP function. PARP1 recognizes and binds to sites of DNA damage through its Zn-finger domains (Zf). PARP inhibitors can trap PARP1 on damaged DNA in a complex that is possibly more toxic than unrepaired single strand DNA breaks (28). PARP inhibitors also block the enzymatic activity of the enzyme thereby inhibiting poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation, which in turn blocks recruitment of downstream repair proteins (114).
Active clinical trials investigating PARP inhibitors in gynecologic malignancies.
| Agent | Clinical trial identifier | Trial description | Phase | Combination or monotherapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Olaparib | NCT01237067 | Olaparib in combination with carboplatin for refractory/recurrent women’s cancers | 1 | Combination |
| NCT01116648 | Olaparib in combination with cediranib for recurrent ovarian or TNBC | 1/2 | Combination | |
| NCT01445418 | Olaparib with carboplatin to treat breast and ovarian cancer | 1 | Combination | |
| NCT01623349 | Olaparib with BKM120 in recurrent TNBC or high-grade serous ovarian cancer | 1 | Combination | |
| NCT01650376 | Olaparib with carboplatin and paclitaxel in relapsed ovarian cancer | 1b | Combination | |
| NCT00782574 | Olaparib with cisplatin in advanced solid tumors | 1 | Combination | |
| NCT00628251 | Olaparib versus doxorubicin in advanced BRCA1/2 ovarian cancer patients who have failed previous platinum-therapy | 2 | Monotherapy | |
| NCT01844986 | Olaparib in BRCA-mutated ovarian cancer patients following first line platinum-based chemotherapy | 3 | Monotherapy | |
| NCT01078662 | Olaparib in advanced cancers with a confirmed BRCA1/2 mutation | 2 | Monotherapy | |
| NCT01874353 | Olaparib in BCRA mutated ovarian cancer patients after complete or partial response to platinum chemotherapy | 3 | Monotherapy | |
| NCT00516373 | Olaparib in ovarian cancer | 1 | Monotherapy | |
| Veliparib | NCT00989651; GOG-9923 | Veliparib in combination with carboplatin, paclitaxel, bevacizumab for newly diagnosed ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer | 1 | Combination |
| NCT01306032 | Veliparib with cyclophosphamide in refractory BRCA-positive ovarian, primary peritoneal, ovarian high-grade serous carcinoma, fallopian tube cancer, TNBC, low-grade non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma | 2 | Combination | |
| NCT01459380; GOG 9927 | Veliparib in combination with doxorubicin, carboplatin, and bevacizumab | 1 | Combination | |
| NCT01281852; GOG-0076HH | Veliparib with cisplatin and paclitaxel in patients with advanced, persistent, or recurrent cervical cancer | 1/2 | Combination | |
| NCT01145430 | Veliparib and doxorubicin for recurrent ovarian, fallopian tube, and primary peritoneal cancers or metastatic breast cancer | 1 | Combination | |
| NCT01266447; GOG 127-W | Veliparib, topotecan, and filgrastim or pegfilgrastim in patients with persistent/recurrent cervical cancer | 2 | Combination | |
| NCT01690598 | Veliparib with topotecan in patients with platinum-resistant or partially platinum-sensitive relapse of epithelial ovarian cancer with negative or unknown BRCA status | 1/2 | Combination | |
| NCT01012817 | Veliparib with topotecan in relapsed/refractory or primary peritoneal cancer after prior first line platinum-therapy | 2 | Combination | |
| NCT01113957 | Veliparib with temozolomide versus doxorubicin alone in ovarian cancer | 2 | Combination | |
| NCT01749397 | Veliparib and floxuridine in metastatic epithelial ovarian, primary peritoneal, or fallopian tube cancer | 1 | Combination | |
| NCT01540565; GOG-0280 | Veliparib in persistent or recurrent epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer patients with a BRCA2 mutation | 2 | Monotherapy | |
| NCT00892736 | Veliparib monotherapy for patients with BRCA1/2 -mutated cancer, including platinum-refractory ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer; or basal-like breast cancer | 1 | Monotherapy | |
| NCT01472783 | Veliparib for patients with BRCA mutation and platinum-resistant or partially sensitive relapse of epithelial ovarian cancer | 1/2 | Monotherapy | |
| BMN 673 | NCT01286987 | BMN 673 in advanced or recurrent solid tumors, including epithelial and ovarian cancers | 1 | Monotherapy |
| Niraparib | NCT01847274 | Niraparib versus placebo in platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer | 3 | Monotherapy |
| Rucaparib | NCT01009190 | Rucaparib with carboplatin in advanced solid tumors | 1 | Combination |
| NCT01482715 | Rucaparib in patients with BRCA mutation breast or ovarian cancer, or other solid tumor | 1/2 | Monotherapy | |
| NCT00664781 | Rucaparib in metastatic breast cancer or ovarian cancer | 2 | Monotherapy |
A Olaparib, also known as AZD2281.
B Veliparib, also known as ABT-888.
C Niraparib, also known as MK-4827.
D Rucaparib, also known as AG-014699; PF-01367338.
E All clinical trials are found at www.clinicaltrials.gov and listed according to their NCT identifier. Last accessed 2013 June 19.