| Literature DB >> 24930887 |
Stephen P Hack1, Jean-Marie Bruey, Hartmut Koeppen.
Abstract
Aberrant activation of the HGF/MET signaling axis has been strongly implicated in the malignant transformation and progression of gastroesophageal cancer (GEC). MET receptor overexpression in tumor samples from GEC patients has been consistently correlated with an aggressive metastatic phenotype and poor prognosis. In preclinical GEC models, abrogation of HGF/MET signaling has been shown to induce tumor regression as well as inhibition of metastatic dissemination. Promising clinical results in patient subsets in which MET is overexpressed have spurned several randomized studies of HGF/MET-directed agents, including two pivotal global Phase III trials. Available data highlight the need for predictive biomarkers in order to select patients most likely to benefit from HGF/MET inhibition. In this review, we discuss the current knowledge of mechanisms of MET activation in GEC, the current status of the clinical evaluation of MET-targeted therapies in GEC, characteristics of ongoing randomized GEC trials and the associated efforts to identify and validate biomarkers. We also discuss the considerations and challenges for HGF/MET inhibitor drug development in the GEC setting.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24930887 PMCID: PMC4102777 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.2003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1The HGF/MET axis and targeted therapy strategies
(A) The MET receptor is activated at the plasma membrane through the binding of HGF to the extracellular domain of MET. Upon dimerization, kinase activation results in trans-autophosphorylation and binding of adaptor proteins, forming scaffolds for recruitment and activation of signaling proteins. MET can then signal through RAS-MAPK, PI3K-AKT, RAC1, and PAK pathways to drive distinct cellular responses including proliferation, survival, motility, invasiveness, and stimulation of angiogenesis. (B) Three pharmacologic approaches are currently being developed as inhibitors of MET signaling including anti-HGF antibodies, monovalent (one-armed) anti-MET antibodies and small molecule MET kinase inhibitors.
Ongoing randomized Phase II and Phase III trials of HGF/MET-targeted drugs in GEC
| Study | Patients | Treatment | Stratification | Participating regions | Primary endpoint |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01590719 Phase II (YO28252) Sponsor: Roche | 1L metastatic GC/GEJ adenocarcinoma | mFOLFOX6 ± onartuzumab | Histologic subtype (Lauren) | USA | PFS (ITT & MET-positive) |
| NCT01662869 Phase III (YO28322, MetGastric) | 1L metastatic MET-positive GC/GEJ adenocarcinoma | mFOLFOX6 ± onartuzumab | MET expression (IHC) Prior gastrectomy | USA Western Europe Eastern Europe | Overall survival (ITT) |
| NCT01697072 Phase III (RILOMET-1) | 1L metastatic or unresectable locally advanced MET-positive GC/GEJ adenocarcinoma | ECX ± rilotumumab | Extent of disease | USA Western Europe | Overall survival |
| NCT01443065 Phase II (MEGA) | 1L metastatic or unresectable locally advanced GC/GEJ adenocarcinoma | mFOLFOX6 Rilotumumab + mFOLFOX6 | Extent of disease Histologic subtype (signet ring/diffuse vs. intestinal/mixed) Study center. | France only | 4-month PFS rate |
Figure 2Possible biomarker strategies to identify MET-driven tumors
Figure 3MET and HGF expression in gastric tumor tissue
Representative immunohistochemistry exemplifying mild to moderate immunoreactivity in normal foveolar epithelium (A), and gastric cancers with negative (B), mild (C), moderate (D) and strong (E) cytoplasmic and/or membranous MET intensity scores. Vascular immunoreactivity is indicated by the arrowhead (B). Immunoreactivity is shown by brown DAB chromogen deposition against a blue haematoxylin counterstain. Representative in situ hybridization for HGF (F) in a gastric cancer with focal (arrowhead) high expression (3+) in stromal cells. Probe hybridization is shown by the brown chromogen dots against a blue haematoxylin counterstain. Bar = 100 μm, insets for A-E at 5× magnification relative to the main image.
Comparison of MetGastric and RILOMET-1 Phase III trials. Key differences in study design are highlighted in bold text
| Trial design | MetGastric | RILOMET-1 |
|---|---|---|
| Anti HGF/MET drug | Onartuzumab | Rilotumumab |
| Patient population | Previously untreated HER2-negative, MET-positive metastatic gastric or GEJ adenocarcinoma | Previously untreated HER2-negative, MET-positive |
| Estimated sample size | ~800 patients | ~450 patients |
| Chemotherapy backbone | ||
| Geographic involvement | Europe, Americas & | Europe, Americas, South Africa & Australia |
| Primary endpoint | Co-primary OS (ITT & MET 2+/3+) | OS |
| Diagnostic partner | Ventana | Dako |
| IHC antibody | SP44 | MET4 |