| Literature DB >> 24643470 |
Helmout Modjtahedi1, Byoung Chul Cho, Martin C Michel, Flavio Solca.
Abstract
Afatinib (also known as BIBW 2992) has recently been approved in several countries for the treatment of a distinct type of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-mutated non-small cell lung cancer. This manuscript comprehensively reviews the preclinical data on afatinib, an irreversible inhibitor of the tyrosine kinase activity of members of the epidermal growth factor receptor family (ErbB) including EGFR, HER2 and ErbB4. Afatinib covalently binds to cysteine 797 of the EGFR and the corresponding cysteines 805 and 803 in HER2 and ErbB4, respectively. Such covalent binding irreversibly inhibits the tyrosine kinase activity of these receptors, resulting in reduced auto- and transphosphorylation within the ErbB dimers and inhibition of important steps in the signal transduction of all ErbB receptor family members. Afatinib inhibits cellular growth and induces apoptosis in a wide range of cells representative for non-small cell lung cancer, breast cancer, pancreatic cancer, colorectal cancer, head and neck squamous cell cancer and several other cancer types exhibiting abnormalities of the ErbB network. This translates into tumour shrinkage in a variety of in vivo rodent models of such cancers. Afatinib retains inhibitory effects on signal transduction and in vitro and in vivo cancer cell growth in tumours resistant to reversible EGFR inhibitors, such as those exhibiting the T790M mutations. Several combination treatments have been explored to prevent and/or overcome development of resistance to afatinib, the most promising being those with EGFR- or HER2-targeted antibodies, other tyrosine kinase inhibitors or inhibitors of downstream signalling molecules.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24643470 PMCID: PMC4019832 DOI: 10.1007/s00210-014-0967-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol ISSN: 0028-1298 Impact factor: 3.000
Potency of afatinib and other compounds to inhibit tyrosine kinase activity of ErbB family members including important mutations of EGFR. Data are shown as the range of the nanomolar concentration causing 50 % inhibition and are adapted from Solca et al. (2012)
| EGFRWT | EGFRL858R | EGFRL858R/T790M | HER2 | ErbB4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Afatinib | 0.2–0.7 | 0.2–0.4 | 9–10 | 7–25 | 0.7–1.7 |
| Canertinib | 0.3–1.7 | 0.4–0.8 | 18–36 | 22–72 | 0.8–10 |
| Erlotinib | 0.9–1.7 | 1.1–2.7 | 1,520–3,562 | 238–698 | 579–756 |
| Gefitinib | 0.4–4.7 | 0.8–1.4 | 534–1,267 | 416–1,830 | 293–323 |
| Lapatinib | 0.3–17 | 2–8 | >4,000 | 6–25 | 18–30 |
Fig. 1Afatinib
Fig. 2Schematic representation of activation, signalling and targeting of ErbB receptor family members. Overexpression or mutation of ErbB family members (EGFR, HER2, ErbB3 or ErbB4) or overexpression/translocation of ErbB growth factors results in the formation of ErbB homo- and heterodimers; for simplicity only, one heterodimer (EGFR:HER2) is shown here but all homo- and heterodimer combinations between the four monomers are possible. Dimerization leads to the formation of asymmetric head-to-tail complexes of the intracellular kinase domains resulting in transphosphorylation and receptor dimer activation resulting in downstream signalling. ErbB pathway engagement increases cell proliferation, angiogenesis, migration, metastasis and invasion, reduction of apoptosis and/or resistance to radiation and chemotherapy. Anti-ErbB monoclonal antibodies can be directed against EGFR (e.g. cetuximab and panitumab), HER2 (e.g. pertuzumab and trastuzumab) or ErbB3 (e.g. MM121). Small molecule TKIs can be EGFR-specific (e.g. erlotinib and gefitinib), dual EGFR/HER2 (e.g. lapatinib) or pan-ErbB blockers (e.g. afatinib and canertinib)
Fig. 3Anti-tumour activity of the glycolysis inhibitor 2-deoxy-d-glucose (2DG), afatinib and their combination as compared to control (CON) in a PC9-GR tumour xenograft model. Upper panel: Mice bearing PC9-GR xenografts received the indicated drugs daily. Data represent mean ± SE. ***P < 0.001 vs. control; ###P < 0.001 vs. 2DG; +++P < 0.001 vs. afatinib. Lower panel: After 5 days of drug treatment, mice were sacrificed and tumour tissue was analysed by histology (haematoxylin/eosin staining) and immunohistochemistry for the proliferation marker PCNA. Reproduced from Kim et al. (2013)
Fig. 4Synergistic growth inhibition of human pancreatic cancer cells following treatment with a combination of afatinib and the IGF-IR inhibitor NVP-AEW541. a BxPc3, b AsPc-1 cell line. Reproduced from Ioannou et al. (2013)