| Literature DB >> 25505733 |
Abstract
Lung adenocarcinoma is the most common subtype of lung cancer today. With the discovery of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutations, anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) rearrangements, and effective targeted therapy, personalized medicine has become a reality for patients with lung adenocarcinoma. Here, we review potential additional targets and novel therapies of interest in lung adenocarcinoma including targets within the cell surface (receptor tyrosine kinases EGFR, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, RET, ROS1, mesenchymal-epidermal transition, TRK), targets in intracellular signal transduction (ALK, RAS-RAF-MEK, PI3K-AKT-PTEN, WNT), nuclear targets such as poly-ADP ribose polymerase, heat shock protein 90, and histone deacetylase, and selected pathways in the tumor environment. With the evolving ability to identify specific molecular aberrations in patient tumors in routine practice, our ability to further personalize therapy in lung adenocarcinoma is rapidly expanding.Entities:
Keywords: ALK; EGFR; NSCLC; intracellular pathways; non-squamous; novel targets; nuclear targets
Year: 2014 PMID: 25505733 PMCID: PMC4243502 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00329
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Targetable pathways in the non-squamous NSCLC cell.
Selected targets and selected targeted agents in lung adenocarcinoma.
| Target | Frequency (common clinical features) | Selected agents under study | Current development |
|---|---|---|---|
| 17–43% (female, never smokers, Asian) | AZD9291 | Phase II/III | |
| CO-1686 | |||
| HM-61713 | |||
| Afatinib + cetuximab | |||
| Erlotinib + AUY922 | |||
| Gefitinib + INC280 ( | |||
| 3–6% (female, never smokers) | Trastuzumab + chemotherapy | Phase II | |
| Afatinib | |||
| Pertuzumab | |||
| Neratinib + temsirolimus | |||
| 1–2% (young, never smokers, poorly differentiated tumor) | Vandetanib | Phase II | |
| Cabozantinib | |||
| Lenvatinib | |||
| Ponatinib | |||
| 1–2% (young, never smokers) | Crizotinib | Phase I/II | |
| Ceritinib | |||
| AP26113 | |||
| Foretinib | |||
| PF-06463922 | |||
| AT13387 | |||
| ~1% | Crizotinib | Phase I | |
| Up to 50% | Ficlatuzumab | Phase II/III | |
| ~1% | RXDX101 | Phase I | |
| Up to 30% | Selumetinib + chemotherapy | Phase I–III | |
| Trametinib + chemotherapy | |||
| MEK162 + chemotherapy | |||
| 3%, smokers | Dabrafenib | Phase I/II | |
| Vemurafenib | |||
| mTOR activation | Up to 90% | Everolimus | Phase II |
| Temsirolimus | |||
| Sirolimus | |||
| PARP | n/a | Olaparib + chemotherapy | Phase II/III |
| Veliparib + chemotherapy | |||
| HDAC | n/a | Romidepsin | Phase II |
| Pabinostat | |||
| Etinostat | |||
| RANK-Ligand | n/a | Denosumab + chemotherapy | Phase III |
| VEGF | n/a | Bevacizumab | Phase II/III |
| Nintedanib | |||
| CTLA-4 | n/a | Ipilimumab | Phase II/III |
| PD-1 | ~40% of lung adenocarcinomas express PD-L1 | Nivolumab | Phase II/III |
| PD-L1 | Lambrolizumab | ||
| BMS-936559 | |||
| MPDL-3286A | |||
n/a, not available; .