Literature DB >> 25653539

BRAF-mutant melanoma: treatment approaches, resistance mechanisms, and diagnostic strategies.

Francesco Spagnolo1, Paola Ghiorzo2, Laura Orgiano3, Lorenza Pastorino2, Virginia Picasso3, Elena Tornari3, Vincenzo Ottaviano3, Paola Queirolo3.   

Abstract

BRAF inhibitors vemurafenib and dabrafenib achieved improved overall survival over chemotherapy and have been approved for the treatment of BRAF-mutated metastatic melanoma. More recently, the combination of BRAF inhibitor dabrafenib with MEK inhibitor trametinib has shown improved progression-free survival, compared to dabrafenib monotherapy, in a Phase II study and has received approval by the US Food and Drug Administration. However, even when treated with the combination, most patients develop mechanisms of acquired resistance, and some of them do not achieve tumor regression at all, because of intrinsic resistance to therapy. Along with the development of BRAF inhibitors, immunotherapy made an important step forward: ipilimumab, an anti-CTLA-4 monoclonal antibody, was approved for the treatment of metastatic melanoma; anti-PD-1 agents achieved promising results in Phase I/II trials, and data from Phase III studies will be ready soon. The availability of such drugs, which are effective regardless of BRAF status, has made the therapeutic approach more complex, as first-line treatment with BRAF inhibitors may not be the best choice for all BRAF-mutated patients. The aim of this paper is to review the systemic therapeutic options available today for patients affected by BRAF V600-mutated metastatic melanoma, as well as to summarize the mechanisms of resistance to BRAF inhibitors and discuss the possible strategies to overcome them. Moreover, since the molecular analysis of tumor specimens is now a pivotal and decisional factor in the treatment strategy of metastatic melanoma patients, the advances in the molecular detection techniques for the BRAF V600 mutation will be reported.

Entities:  

Keywords:  BRAF; BRAF inhibitor; dabrafenib; melanoma; resistance; vemurafenib

Year:  2015        PMID: 25653539      PMCID: PMC4303458          DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S39096

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Onco Targets Ther        ISSN: 1178-6930            Impact factor:   4.147


Background

Cutaneous melanoma is the most aggressive form of skin cancer, with a global incidence of about 200,000 new cases per year, likely to increase over the next years. Although melanoma represents only 4% of all types of skin cancers, it is correlated with about 80% of skin cancer-related deaths (about 65,000 per year). Survival rates depend on the clinical stage at the diagnosis, with 5-year survival ranging from 15% to 60% in patients with distant and local metastases, respectively.1 The prognosis of metastatic melanoma has recently changed substantially thanks to the approval of kinase inhibitors vemurafenib,2 dabrafenib,3 and trametinib,4 and the immune checkpoint inhibitor ipilimumab.5,6 More recently, immune checkpoint inhibitors nivolumab7 and pembrolizumab8 have achieved promising results in clinical trials, which will probably lead to the approval of these drugs by the regulatory agencies. Vemurafenib and dabrafenib are selective inhibitors of BRAF V600, a mutation carried by almost half of melanomas,9 and are approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and European Medicines Agency for the treatment of unresectable or metastatic melanoma with mutant BRAF V600. In the Phase III trial of vemurafenib,2 median overall survival (OS) was 13.6 months in the vemurafenib group, compared with 9.7 months in the dacarbazine group; median progression-free survival (PFS) was 6.9 months in the vemurafenib group and only 1.6 months in the dacarbazine group; response rate for vemurafenib was 57%, compared with 9% for dacarbazine. Dabrafenib achieved similar results, with a PFS of 5.1 months in the Phase III study.3 Trametinib is an MEK inhibitor that achieved improved PFS (4.8 versus 1.5 months) compared to chemotherapy in a randomized Phase III study4 and, more importantly, was investigated as combination therapy with dabrafenib. In the Phase II trial comparing trametinib plus dabrafenib with dabrafenib alone,10 the median PFS were 9.4 months and 5.8 months for patients treated with dabrafenib 150 mg twice daily plus trametinib 2 mg daily and dabrafenib monotherapy, respectively. On the basis of these results, at the beginning of 2014 the FDA approved the combination of dabrafenib plus trametinib for the treatment of unresectable or metastatic melanoma with a BRAF V600E or V600K mutation. Other kinase inhibitors are in late stages of clinical development. LGX818 is a potent and selective BRAF inhibitor with a dissociation half-time about 10 times longer than other BRAF inhibitors; in the Phase I trial a response rate as high as 67% was achieved among BRAF inhibitors-naïve patients.11 A three-arm Phase III trial is currently recruiting participants in order to compare the efficacy and safety of LGX818 monotherapy and LGX818 in combination with MEK inhibitor MEK162 as compared to vemurafenib in patients with locally advanced unresectable or metastatic melanoma with BRAF V600 mutation (NCT01909453). Moreover, a Phase III clinical trial comparing vemurafenib in combination with MEK inhibitor cobimetinib versus vemurafenib monotherapy (NCT01689519) met its primary endpoint (PFS), and these data are planned to be submitted to health authorities.12 Along with the development of BRAF and MEK inhibitors, immunotherapy made some steps forward as well: ipilimumab, a fully human IgG1 monoclonal antibody that blocks cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen (CTLA)-4 to elicit antitumor T-cell-mediated responses, was approved for the treatment of metastatic melanoma as it achieved a statistically significant improvement in OS in two different randomized Phase III trials in pretreated5 and in treatment-naïve6 patients with metastatic melanoma; nivolumab and pembrolizumab, monoclonal antibodies targeting the programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) receptor on infiltrating T-cells, which otherwise produces an inhibition of T-cells directed against melanoma antigens, showed promising clinical activity and efficacy, and pembrolizumab was recently approved by the FDA for the treatment of patients with unresectable or metastatic melanoma and disease progression following ipilimumab and, if BRAF V600 mutation positive, a BRAF inhibitor. A compassionate use of both drugs is available in several countries all over the world.

Signaling pathways in BRAF-mutated melanoma

The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway plays an important role in the pathogenesis of melanoma. This pathway is physiologically activated when extracellular signals bind to their cognate membrane receptor, typically a receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK). RAF kinases are components of the pathway: their activity requires the formation of dimers, which is promoted by RAS activation. Activated RAF kinases phosphorylate and activate MEK1/2, which in turn phosphorylate and activate ERK1/2, leading to cellular proliferation, survival, and differentiation, and to an inhibitory feedback toward upstream components of the pathway.13 About 50% of melanomas harbor an activating mutation in BRAF, the most common being BRAF,9 which renders the kinase constitutively active. In BRAF-mutated melanomas, RAS is negatively regulated by ERK-dependent feedback and BRAFV600E exists mainly as a monomer.13 BRAF inhibitors inhibit ERK signaling only in BRAF-mutated tumors. In wild-type (WT) cells, BRAF and CRAF form homo- and heterodimers on RAS activation; BRAF inhibitors binding to one member of the dimer causes an allosteric transactivation of the drug-free protomer, leading to ERK activation. This is enhanced when RAS, which promotes RAF dimerization, is overexpressed:14 in fact, most cutaneous tumors developing in patients treated with BRAF inhibitors harbor RAS mutations.15 The PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway is a key regulator of cellular growth and protein synthesis.16,17 The MAPK pathway interacts with the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway at multiple points: for example, RAS directly activates PI3K, and the inhibition of a pathway may upregulate the other one.16,18

Diagnostic strategies

Detection of BRAF V600 mutations has recently become mandatory to treat patients with advanced or metastatic melanoma. Several methods have been used to detect BRAF mutations, including Sanger sequencing, mismatch ligation assay, ligase detection reaction, denaturating high-performance liquid chromatography, SNAPshot®, high-resolution melting, mutation-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and mutation-specific real-time (RT) PCR, including EntroGen molecular probes (CE-IVD), pyrosequencing, and mass spectrometry.19–24 Each method has its own sensitivity, specificity, cost, and response delay. Several studies have been performed to compare the methods for detection of these mutations.24–29 Recently, detection of BRAF p.V600E mutation was also performed by immunohistochemistry (IHC) with VE1 antibody, and next-generation sequencing (NGS) technology is currently being used to analyze melanoma specimens in many research institutions. Below, we compare the most commonly used methods for the detection of BRAF mutations in melanomas to determine the method or combination of methods that should be used in diagnostic daily practice (Table 1). Our suggestion is that sequential analysis, with initial detection of p.V600E-positive cases by IHC and/or Sanger sequencing, followed by pyrosequencing or RT-PCR-based tests in negative or uninterpretable cases, is the most efficient method to use in daily practice, in certified laboratories, with validated techniques.
Table 1

Sensitivity and specificity of the described methods

Diagnostic methodSensitivity (%)Specificity (%)Reference
IHC93–9792–982831
Sanger sequencing80–93.410028,29
Pyrosequencing9590–9429,34
HRM93.710028,29
Cobas®939826,29
PNA-clamping real-time PCR99.510033,34
NGS9810029

Notes: Data were obtained either from the manufacturer (CE-marked tests, Cobas® and PNA clamp) or from the literature, when comparing different techniques in the same samples. A range of sensitivity and specificity has been reported when different data were obtained in different studies.

Abbreviations: IHC, immunohistochemistry; HRM, high-resolution melting; PNA, peptide nucleic acid; NGS, next-generation sequencing.

Immunohistochemistry

IHC with VE1 monoclonal antibody was found to be efficient to detect p.V600E mutations.30 The advantages of this technique are that only two slides are needed, no specialized equipment is needed, it is cheaper than other techniques, and results are easily obtained within 48 hours. Interestingly, IHC with VE1 monoclonal antibody was reported to have a 100% sensitivity and specificity for detection of p.V600E, even when compared with methods more sensitive than Sanger sequencing.31 However, important disadvantages are that staining interpretation is easy in most, but not all, cases, and that the VE1 antibody is highly specific for the V600E mutation, but other clinically relevant BRAF mutations are missed. For these reasons, it could be used as a cost-effective first-line method for BRAF V600E detection in a daily practice sequential combination of methods.32

Sanger sequencing

For many years, Sanger sequencing has been considered the reference method for identification of acquired mutations in tumors. However, because of its low sensitivity (direct sequencing cannot detect the presence of mutant alleles when the mutant/WT ratio is less than 1:5),28 detection of mutations from tumor DNA requires a high percentage of tumor cells within the samples, a requirement that cannot always be met in routine diagnostic testing of human samples. A recent study compared four methods for the detection of BRAF mutations in metastatic melanomas.31 Microdissection of metastatic melanomas was performed to increase the number of tumor cells to at least 60%. However, 3 of the 40 melanomas with p.V600E mutation detected by other methods were negative with Sanger sequencing. The sensitivity of Sanger sequencing was 92.5% (95% confidence interval [CI], 78.5%–98.0%) for p.V600E detection. Thus, 7.5% of patients eligible for treatment with BRAF inhibitors would have been excluded. In line with this, another recently published series found a false-negative rate of Sanger detection of BRAF mutations of 9.2%.24 Interestingly, false-negative cases with Sanger sequencing corresponded to tumors with a high proportion of tumor cells within the samples. This finding may be related to tumor heterogeneity, with only some subclones containing p.V600E mutation and others being WT. These data indicate that Sanger sequencing failed to detect BRAF mutations in melanomas and therefore should no longer be considered as the reference test, but as a first screening or a confirmation test. Alternatively, in samples negative with Sanger sequencing, one of the tests described below should be performed.

Pyrosequencing

Pyrosequencing is an RT sequencing by synthesis approach which allows the quantification of mutated alleles. It is a rapid and more sensitive method compared with direct sequencing for quantifying the BRAF V600 mutation. In a study comparing different techniques, pyrosequencing has been shown to have 100% sensitivity (95% CI, 92.4%–100%) and specificity (95% CI, 91.6%–100%) for p.V600 detection.31 Another recent study comparing different detection methods found that there was no difference in sensitivity between the high-resolution melting analysis and Sanger sequencing (98%). All mutations down to 6.6% allele frequency could be detected with 100% specificity. In contrast, pyrosequencing detected 100% of the mutations down to 5% allele frequency but exhibited only 90% specificity, being prone to errors without using a customer-designed setup to identify all BRAF mutations at codon V600.29 Overall, pyrosequencing could be performed only on cases not interpretable or negative, corresponding to approximately 50%–60% of samples analyzed by IHC and Sanger sequencing.

RT-PCR-based tests

Several RT-PCR-based tests, certified or not, have been developed, with an overall sensitivity of 97.5% (higher than that of Sanger sequencing) and variable specificity (depending on their design specific for V600E mutation or not, and thus ranging from 87.8% to 100%). The two FDA/CE-IVD-approved tests for BRAF mutations (cobas® 4800 BRAF V600 mutation test and THxID®-BRAF) are both RT-PCR-based assays. Major disadvantages are that they are optimized for the most common BRAF mutation, and less common BRAF mutations that may still be responsive to BRAF inhibitor therapy may be missed. Further, although these assays require only a small amount of DNA, if the specimen contains <10% of tumor cells, these assays may fail to detect the mutation (the cobas® test guidelines recommend a tumor content of 50% in samples). Recently, the cobas® test was found to detect only 70% of p.V600K, whereas 100% of p.V600E was detected.24 Interestingly, in a study comparing different techniques, RT-PCR detected 39 of the 40 p.V600E mutations and all WT cases. The sensitivity of RT PCR for p.V600E detection was 97.5% (95% CI, 87.1% to 99.6%), and specificity was 87.8% (95% CI, 75.8%–94.3%). Surprisingly, the six cases with p.V600K mutation were also positive, although with a lower signal. The four other BRAF mutations, including p.V600R, were not detected by RT-PCR. The RT-PCR detection of p.V600K was possible only after inhibition of WT allele amplification. This may be the cause of a lower sensitivity.31 Inhibition of the WT allele amplification, as performed with peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) to analyze the mutated allele, is in fact an added value to these techniques. Recently, CE-IVD RT-PCR tests based on PNA inhibition have been developed to detect all the mutations at codon V600, with a sensitivity comparable to that of pyrosequencing.33 PNA-mediated clamping PCR (PNA-clamping PCR) is based on the principle that PNA inhibits WT by hybridizing normal sequences, and therefore mutant DNA is preferentially amplified.34 Indeed, PNA clamp RT-PCR detected a 0.5% BRAF V600E mutant in the background of the WT with high sensitivity. PNA-clamping PCR may offer a sensitive and reliable alternative method to pyrosequencing, particularly for the detection of a small amount of mutant. Overall, RT-PCR-based assays, however, provide qualitative information only on BRAF at codon 600; no other genes are characterized, and the results are not quantitative (how much mutated BRAF is present). Further, when they are optimized for the most common BRAF mutation (V600E), less common BRAF mutations that may still be responsive to inhibitor therapy may be missed with the exception of PNA-clamp PCR, which detects all mutations at p.V600 with a sensitivity comparable to that of pyrosequencing. A recent study comparing different methods for detecting BRAF mutations concluded that in their present setup, the cobas® 4800 BRAF V600 test as well as the therascreen® BRAF Pyro Kit (Qiagen NV, Venlo, the Netherlands) are not sufficient for the European approval of vemurafenib because there is a therapeutic option for melanoma patients with any mutation in codon 600 of the BRAF gene.35 The authors suggest a combination of VE1 antibody staining and high-resolution melting or sequencing for p.V600E mutation analysis, combining the lowest detection limit with a fast, reliable method with 100% sensitivity for routine diagnostics at the moment.

Next-generation sequencing

NGS is currently being used to analyze melanoma specimens in many research institutions. Many platforms are available, but what they have in common is that they are massively parallel sequencing techniques in which relatively small stretches (which may cover an exon, a gene, or the whole genome) of DNA are sequenced many times (typically 20 to several hundred times). NGS has several advantages over RT-PCR techniques, the most important being that it provides far more genetic information: besides mutations, NGS can detect rearrangements, amplifıcations, and deletions, and can analyze many genes. This will become increasingly important as we discover other actionable mutations/mechanisms of resistance to BRAF inhibition. NGS is also more sensitive than many RT-PCR assays, and can detect mutations even when tumor DNA represents less than 10% of the total DNA. NGS could analyze 100% of the cases with 100% specificity and exhibited 98.6% sensitivity in a recent study comparing different methods.29 Among disadvantages, NGS generally requires more tumor material, has a longer turn-around time, and requires a higher expertise in computational biology than any other established methods. Most of the information obtained is not yet clinically relevant, and the assays are not FDA approved. International validation is ongoing. NGS requires specialized equipment, computers, and bioinformatics, making it more expensive. This makes NGS largely a research tool at this time. In the near future and with growing experiences, it is an inevitable fact that NGS will replace all established methods for molecular diagnostics, in view of the high sensitivity and multiplexing options of this method allowing generation of a molecular profile of each tumor sample analyzed.29 A recent study performing whole cancer genome sequencing by NGS methods states that almost 75% of cancer gene variations may be missed by an approach analyzing only hotspot mutations.36

Treatment approaches

The presence of a BRAF V600 mutation is an important factor to decide the treatment approach that is the best for each patient, but it is not the only one. In fact, first-line treatment with BRAF inhibitors or BRAF inhibitors in combination with MEK inhibitors may not be the best therapeutic strategy for all patients, and the possibility to start with immunotherapy must be considered. FDA approval of ipilimumab includes the first-line treatment of metastatic melanoma, and even if in Europe, initially, the indication was in pretreated patients only, since October 2013 it has been broadened to first-line as well. Moreover, anti-PD-1 agents achieved promising results in clinical trials7,8,37 and may be recommended soon as a first-line treatment. The role of chemotherapy as a frontline approach for BRAF-mutated metastatic melanoma has been limited by the introduction of targeted therapies. Currently, dacarbazine is the only FDA-approved chemotherapeutic drug for the treatment of metastatic melanoma, and it has not been shown to improve PFS or OS. BRAF inhibitors and BRAF inhibitors in combination with MEK inhibitors achieve tumor regression in a high rate of patients (50%–76%),2,3,10 PFS2,3 and OS2 are improved compared to those seen with chemotherapy, and the onset of tumor regression is early,41 allowing to treat successfully even symptomatic patients with low performance status and a rapidly evolving disease. Even if mechanisms of resistance, which will be discussed in the “Resistance mechanisms” section, arise in most patients, leading to tumor regrowth, there is the chance for long-term survival at least for a subset of patients, with 26% of patients from the Phase I study being alive at 3 years.38 Emerging clinical evidence suggests that extended BRAF inhibition after progression on BRAF inhibitors may prolong survival.42,43 In a series of 114 patients treated with vemurafenib and dabrafenib within clinical trials, continued therapy with BRAF inhibitors after progressive disease was associated with prolonged survival;42 similar results were observed in the Phase I study of vemurafenib.38 However, these data may be biased by patient selection, and prospective randomized trials are needed to investigate the role that prolonged BRAF inhibition may have in the treatment strategies for BRAF-mutated patients. A prospective, single-arm Phase II study was designed to evaluate the activity of treatment after progression during the therapy with vemurafenib with the combination of vemurafenib and fotemustine (NCT01983124). Preliminary results of the Phase III trial of the combination of dabrafenib and trametinib versus dabrafenib monotherapy were presented at ASCO 2014 annual meeting:39 even if PFS was only slightly better in the combination arm (9.3 versus 8.8 months), dabrafenib and trametinib achieved 29% improvement in response rate and 37% reduction in risk of death over the monotherapy. In addition, the analysis ad interim of the other Phase III trial comparing the combination of dabrafenib and trametinib with vemurafenib monotherapy showed an OS benefit in the combination arm, allowing the crossover to the combination arm for the patients in treatment with vemurafenib.40 In contrast, the response rate and PFS with ipilimumab are lower than those with BRAF/MEK inhibitors and the onset of tumor regression is slow, as it may take time to build an immune antitumor response. However, even if the number of objective responses is relatively low, ipilimumab can induce long-lasting disease control and long-term survival: 18.2% of patients treated within Phase II studies with the approved dose of ipilimumab were alive after 4 years.44 Retrospective clinical data seem to indicate that the activity of ipilimumab is not influenced by BRAF mutational status,45 but the administration of ipilimumab after the failure of BRAF inhibitors may have suboptimal results;46–48 however, no prospective data are available to date. In the ECOG E1612 trial, patients with BRAF-mutated metastatic melanoma were randomized to receive either ipilimumab followed by vemurafenib at progression or vice versa; patients were stratified based on ECOG performance status (0 or 1), stage (III and M1a/b or M1c), and prior treatment (yes or no). ECOG trial E4613 will similarly investigate sequential treatment with the combinations ipilimumab and nivolumab versus dabrafenib and trametinib. Until the availability of prospective data from these studies, the choice of first-line treatment for BRAF-mutated metastatic melanoma patients relies on retrospective data and expert opinion. Patients with poor performance status and rapidly evolving disease, whose estimated life expectancy is less than 3 months, may not benefit from front-line treatment with ipilimumab, as may patients with high LDH levels.49 The presence of brain metastasis is historically associated with lack of efficacy of systemic therapies and poor prognosis.50 Even if ipilimumab showed clinical activity in patients with pretreated, asymptomatic, and not steroid-dependent brain metastasis,51,52 only BRAF inhibitors have evidence of activity in case of active brain metastasis.53–55 The identification of new biomarkers may also help selecting patients who are likely to respond to ipilimumab: for example, CTLA-4 gene polymorphisms seem to influence the response to anti-CTLA-4 antibodies,56 and some immunological signature may predict response to immunotherapy in general.57 Anti-PD-1 agents nivolumab and pembrolizumab achieved higher response rates in Phase I–II studies than did ipilimumab (25%–38%),7,8 and the onset of response was shorter. The duration of response is also impressive, with most responses lasting more than 12 months. Their availability in daily clinical practice may influence the therapeutic strategies, as also patients unfit to be treated with ipilimumab may benefit from treatment with anti-PD-1 drugs. Until then, patients with short life expectancy or who are unlikely to respond to ipilimumab should be treated with BRAF inhibitors or BRAF and MEK inhibitors in combination as a first-line treatment. Two BRAF inhibitors are currently available: vemurafenib and dabrafenib. Data from clinical trials showed that they have substantially the same clinical activity in patients with the BRAF V600E mutation, but they slightly differ in toxicity. Both treatments are well-tolerated, and dose reductions were needed in the range of 28% for dabrafenib3 and 38% for vemurafenib2 in the Phase III studies. Cutaneous side effects, fatigue, arthralgia, and nausea are the most common adverse events shared by the two drugs;2,3 however, vemurafenib causes a higher rate of hepatic transaminitis, photosensitivity, and cutaneous hyperproliferative lesions (including squamous cell carcinomas and keratoacanthomas), whereas pyrexia is more commonly seen with dabrafenib.2,3 As for the BRAF V600K mutation, which is the second most common BRAF V600 mutation in melanoma (19% as compared with 73% for BRAF V600E),58 in the Phase III study, vemurafenib achieved similar PFS and OS irrespective of the mutation;2 in the Phase III trial of dabrafenib,3 patients whose melanoma harbored a V600K mutation were excluded from the study, but some data are available from the Phase II trial:59 only 2 patients with the V600K mutation had a response (13%), compared with 45 patients (59%) harboring V600E. However, median PFS (4.5 versus 6.3 months) and OS (12.9 versus 13.1 months) were similar in the two groups. About 8% of melanomas harbor other genotypes than V600E and V600K,58 such as V600R, and some clinical evidence suggest that vemurafenib and dabrafenib may have clinical activity in this setting.60 The clinical activity of BRAF inhibitors in patients whose melanomas harbor a non-V600E mutation underlines the importance of using a diagnostic tool that detects all BRAF V600 mutations. The role of trametinib monotherapy may be limited as a first-line treatment of BRAF-mutated melanoma, as well as after the failure of therapy with BRAF inhibitors.61 In the Phase II study of MEK inhibitor trametinib in BRAF-mutated patients,61 there were no confirmed objective responses in the cohort of patients previously treated with a BRAF inhibitor. On the contrary, combination therapy with trametinib and dabrafenib achieved improved clinical activity over dabrafenib monotherapy, but adverse events leading to treatment discontinuation (9% versus 5%), dose reduction (24% versus 13%), and dose interruption (45% versus 30%) were more frequent in patients treated with the combination than in those receiving only dabrafenib.43 Pyrexia was the most notable risk for the combination compared with dabrafenib, while fewer cutaneous hyperproliferative events were observed in the combination arm, consistent with the identification of activating RAS mutations in most skin tumors developing during therapy with BRAF inhibitors.13

Resistance mechanisms

About 15% of patients treated with BRAF inhibitors do not achieve tumor regression, because of intrinsic/primary mechanisms of resistance, and most patients who respond to therapy ultimately develop a mechanism of acquired/secondary resistance, leading to progressive disease. Mechanisms of primary resistance include RAC1 mutations,62 COT overexpression,63 alterations in RTK signaling,64,65 loss of function of NF1,66–69 alterations in the RB1 pathway,70,71 and alterations in the PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway (loss of function of PTEN) (Table 2).71–74
Table 2

Mechanisms of intrinsic/primary resistance

AberrationMechanism of resistanceReference
RAC1P29S mutationsRAC1 regulates cell proliferation and migration62
COT overexpressionCOT activates ERK through mechanism that does not depend on RAF signaling63
Alterations in RTK signalingRTK activation can signal either through CRAF or through the PI3K pathway64,65
Loss of NF1NF1 is a tumor suppressor that inhibits RAS; inactivation of NF1 leads to activation of the signaling pathways downstream of RAS, including PI3K/AKT and MAPK6669
Dysregulation of CDK4 and/or cyclin D1Cyclin D1 binds CDK4 and CDK6, which in turn phosphorylate the retinoblastoma protein and lead to cell cycle progression70,71
Loss of PTENPTEN is a tumor suppressor of the PI3K-AKT pathway; loss of function of PTEN leads to AKT activation7174

Abbreviation: RTK, receptor tyrosine kinase.

The reactivation of the MAPK pathway is the most frequent cause of acquired/secondary resistance; it may be driven by events that occur upstream (upregulation and activation of the RTKs,75–79 NRAS activating mutations75), downstream (activating MEK1/2 mutations62,74,80–83), or at the level of BRAF (alternative splicing of V600E BRAF,84 BRAF copy number amplification,85 elevated CRAF levels86) (Table 3). The PI3K-PTEN-AKT pathway is a second core resistance pathway: AKT1/3 mutations and mutations in PI3K-AKT positive-regulatory and negative-regulatory genes may upregulate this pathway,62,80,87 driving resistance to BRAF inhibitor.
Table 3

Mechanisms of acquired/secondary resistance

AberrationMechanism of resistanceReference
RTKs upregulationRTK activation can signal either through CRAF or through the PI3K pathway7579
Mutations in NRASNRAS-activating mutations (NRASQ61, NRAST58, NRASG13R) promote enhanced RAF dimerization; RAF inhibitors binding of one member of the dimer results in allosteric transactivation of the drug-free protomer and activation of MEK/ERK75
Activating MEK1/2 mutationsMEK1 is situated immediately downstream of RAF proteins in the MAPK pathway and promotes ERK phosphorylation; MEK2 forms heterodimers with MEK1 which activate ERK. Only some mutations have been associated with resistance (MEK1C121S, MEK1Q56P, MEK1K57E, MEK1E203K, MEK1V60E, MEK1G128V, MEK2F57C, MEK2C125S, MEK2V35M, MEK2L46F, MEK2N126D)62,74,8083
Alternative splicing of V600E BRAFOwing to high dimerization property irrespective of RAS status, strongly activates MEK and ERK1/2 in the presence of an RAF inhibitor84
V600E BRAF copy number amplificationMEK/ERK reactivation in an RAS and CRAF-independent manner due to an increased expression of BRAF85
Elevated CRAFElevated CRAF protein levels have been associated with increased levels of phosphorylated ERK1/2 levels and may account for the acquisition of resistance to BRAFi due to increased RAF dimerization86
Alterations of PI3K-AKT pathwayAKT1/3 mutations (Q79K and E17K), mutations in PI3K–AKT positive-regulatory genes (PIK3CA and PIK3CG) and in negative-regulatory genes (PIK3R2 and PHLPP1) upregulate the PI3K-AKT pathway; the missense mutation AKT1A102V has not been associated with AKT1 activation.62,80,87

Abbreviation: RTK, receptor tyrosine kinase.

No association was observed between clinical outcome (best response and PFS) and specific mechanisms of resistance.80 Some tumors develop multiple mechanisms of resistance simultaneously in the same patient (intrapatient heterogeneity) or even in the same lesion (intratumor heterogeneity).60,87 In addition to intrinsic and acquired resistance, mechanisms of adaptive response to BRAF inhibition limit the efficacy of treatment with BRAF inhibitors, leading mostly to partial responses, with complete response rate being in the range of only 3%–6% in the Phase III studies of vemurafenib and dabrafenib.2,3 In BRAF-mutated cells, ERK transcriptional products are upregulated, including negative-feedback components, which suppress RAS activation. As a result, RAS does not promote RAF dimerization and BRAF exists predominantly as an active monomer. Treatment with BRAF inhibitors, in addition to arresting tumor growth, relieves ERK negative feedback, partially restoring the sensitivity to extracellular signaling and the activity of RAS, promoting the formation of RAF dimers. BRAF inhibitors bind to one component of the dimer and cause an allosteric activation of the other one.14 ERK is reactivated and negative-feedback pathways are partially restored over time, leading to the formation of a new steady state of reactivated ERK signaling, which is different among different cell lines.13 The PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway is also involved in the mechanisms of adaptive resistance: in fact, the inhibition of the MAPK pathway leads to early, adaptive AKT signaling, unleashing a rebound activation of PI3K-AKT pathway.88

Discussion and conclusion

Intrapatient and intratumor heterogeneity of resistance,62,87,89,90 cross-resistance,17,91 and alternative pathways activation88 are a challenge for personalized targeted therapies. Preclinical and clinical evidence suggest that one strategy to overcome resistance to BRAF inhibition may be the combination of multiple inhibitors. The combination of BRAF and MEK inhibitors dabrafenib and trametinib achieved a slightly better PFS over dabrafenib monotherapy in the Phase III study. Nevertheless, most mechanisms of resistance may confer cross-resistance to MEK inhibition and may lead to the activation of additional pathways, such as PI3K-AKT-mTOR, suggesting that multiple pathways may be needed to be targeted to achieve durable responses.17,91 Phase I/II trials are evaluating the safety and clinical activity of such combination regimens in patients (Table 4).
Table 4

Ongoing Phase I/II studies investigating multitargeted combinations

Combination regimenPhaseStatusClinicalTrials.gov identifler
MEK inhibitor MEK162
 PI3K inhibitor BKM120IActive, not recruitingNCT01363232
 PI3K/mTOR inhibitor BEZ235ICompletedNCT01337765
MEK inhibitor MSC1936369B
 P13K/mTOR inhibitor SAR245409ICompletedNCT01390818
Trametinib
 P13K inhibitor GSK2126458ITerminated because of lack of efficacyNCT01248858
MEK inhibitor GDC-0973
 P13K inhibitor GDC-0941ICompletedNCT00996892
Vemurafenib
 HSP90 inhibitor XL888IRecruitingNCT01657591
 Cabozantinib-S-malateIRecruitingNCT01835184
 P13Kβ inhibitor SAR260301IRecruitingNCT01673737
 mTOR inhibitors everolimus and temsirolimusIRecruitingNCT01596140
Dabrafenib + trametinib
 Hsp90 inhibitor AT13387IRecruitingNCT02097225
Vemurafenib
 MetforminI/IIRecruitingNCT01638676
 CDK inhibitor P1446A-05I/IIRecruitingNCT01841463
 P13K inhibitor BKM120I/IIRecruitingNCT01512251
 P13K inhibitor PX-866I/IIActive, not recruitingNCT01616199
Dabrafenib
 AKT inhibitor GSK2141795I/IIRecruitingNCT01902173
Dabrafenib + trametinib
 Bcl-2 inhibitor navitoclaxI/IIRecruitingNCT01989585
 MDM2-p53 inhibitor AMG 232I/IINot yet recruitingNCT02110355
MEK inhibitor selumetinib
 AKT inhibitor MK2206IITerminated because of slow accrualNCT01519427
Vemurafenib
 BevacizumabIIRecruitingNCT01495988
An alternative to combination strategies may be an adaptive sequential approach based on the biopsy of progressing tumors during therapy with BRAF inhibitors. A Phase II study (NCT01820364) is currently recruiting metastatic melanoma patients who progress on treatment with BRAF inhibitor LGX818: resistant tumors will be biopsied and compared with a pretreatment biopsy to identify the mechanism of resistance. On the basis of the alterations identified in the tumor samples, a second agent from a list of MEK, CDK4/6, FGFR, PI3K, and c-MET inhibitors will be added to the regimen. A limitation of this study is that single biopsy may underestimate the tumor genomics landscape due to tumor heterogeneity. In the future, the analysis of circulating tumor cells or circulating tumor-derived DNA may provide a complete genetic profile compared to single tumor biopsies,92 but no standard method for their detection and molecular analysis is currently available.93,94 In addition to inhibiting multiple molecular targets, either in combination or in sequence, the combination of BRAF inhibitors and immunotherapy may be a strategy to provide durable responses in a high rate of metastatic melanoma patients. BRAF inhibitors do not seem to impair the immune system95,96 and, on the contrary, may enhance immune activation.97–102 Combined BRAF inhibitor vemurafenib and anti-CTLA-4 antibody ipilimumab are not tolerated.103 Nevertheless, anti-PD-1 antibodies pembrolizumab and nivolumab seem to be more tolerated than ipilimumab: their safety in combination with BRAFi and BRAFi + MEKi is under investigation in Phase I–II clinical studies. In addition, clinical studies are underway to determine the safety and clinical activity of the combination of BRAFi with other immunotherapeutic agents such as anti-PDL-1 antibodies, interleukin, adoptive cell therapy, and interferon (Table 5).
Table 5

Ongoing Phase I/II studies investigating the combination of MAPK inhibitors with immunotherapy

Combination regimenPhaseStatusClinicalTrials.gov identifier
Vemurafenib
 Adoptive cell therapyIRecruitingNCT01585415
 Anti-PDL1 antibody MPDL3280AIRecruitingNCT01656642
Dabrafenib ± trametinib
 IpilimumabIRecruitingNCT01767454
Vemurafenib
 High-dose interferon alfa-2bI/IIRecruitingNCT01943422
 PEG-interferonI/IIRecruitingNCT01959633
 Interleukin 2 + interferon alfa-2bI/IIRecruitingNCT01603212
Dabrafenib + trametinib
 Anti-PDL1 MEDI4736I/IIRecruitingNCT02027961
 PembrolizumabI/IIRecruitingNCT02130466
Vemurafenib
 Adoptive cell transfer and high-dose interleukin 2IIRecruitingNCT01659151
 Interleukin 2IIRecruitingNCT01754376
As mentioned in the “Treatment approaches” section, clinical evidence suggests that prolonged BRAF inhibition after progression on BRAF inhibitors may prolong survival in a subset of patients.42,43 In contrast with these clinical observations, Das Thakur et al demonstrated that cessation of BRAF inhibition may lead to regression of tumors expressing BRAF alternative splicing variants or amplified BRAF and that, in vivo, a discontinuous dosing strategy delayed the onset of resistance over continuous administration.104–106 The safety and efficacy of an intermittent regimen with BRAF inhibitors will be prospectively evaluated in a Phase II trial (NCT01894672): LGX818 will be administered on a daily schedule dosing for the first 6 weeks; this will be followed by a 2-week break and, thereafter, patients will resume LGX818 on a 2-weeks-on/2-weeks-off schedule. Until further investigations and availability of new drugs, in clinical practice patients with rapid and extensive progressive disease during treatment with BRAF inhibitors, alone or in combination with MEK inhibitors, are unlikely to benefit from extended MAPK inhibition and should switch to another treatment; patients with isolated progression, on the other hand, could continue treatment with BRAF inhibitors after local treatment of resistant lesions, as resistance mechanisms are not always shared by all metastases.89
  103 in total

1.  Improved survival with MEK inhibition in BRAF-mutated melanoma.

Authors:  Keith T Flaherty; Caroline Robert; Peter Hersey; Paul Nathan; Claus Garbe; Mohammed Milhem; Lev V Demidov; Jessica C Hassel; Piotr Rutkowski; Peter Mohr; Reinhard Dummer; Uwe Trefzer; James M G Larkin; Jochen Utikal; Brigitte Dreno; Marta Nyakas; Mark R Middleton; Jürgen C Becker; Michelle Casey; Laurie J Sherman; Frank S Wu; Daniele Ouellet; Anne-Marie Martin; Kiran Patel; Dirk Schadendorf
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2012-06-04       Impact factor: 91.245

2.  Improved overall survival in melanoma with combined dabrafenib and trametinib.

Authors:  Caroline Robert; Boguslawa Karaszewska; Jacob Schachter; Piotr Rutkowski; Andrzej Mackiewicz; Daniil Stroiakovski; Michael Lichinitser; Reinhard Dummer; Florent Grange; Laurent Mortier; Vanna Chiarion-Sileni; Kamil Drucis; Ivana Krajsova; Axel Hauschild; Paul Lorigan; Pascal Wolter; Georgina V Long; Keith Flaherty; Paul Nathan; Antoni Ribas; Anne-Marie Martin; Peng Sun; Wendy Crist; Jeff Legos; Stephen D Rubin; Shonda M Little; Dirk Schadendorf
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2014-11-16       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  The nature and management of metastatic melanoma after progression on BRAF inhibitors: effects of extended BRAF inhibition.

Authors:  Matthew M K Chan; Lauren E Haydu; Alexander M Menzies; Mary W F Azer; Oliver Klein; Megan Lyle; Arthur Clements; Alexander Guminski; Richard F Kefford; Georgina V Long
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2014-07-01       Impact factor: 6.860

4.  Dual inhibition of (V600E)BRAF and the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway cooperates to induce apoptosis in melanoma cells through a MEK-independent mechanism.

Authors:  Irene Sánchez-Hernández; Pablo Baquero; Laura Calleros; Antonio Chiloeches
Journal:  Cancer Lett       Date:  2011-10-08       Impact factor: 8.679

Review 5.  Whole cancer genome sequencing by next-generation methods.

Authors:  Jeffrey S Ross; Maureen Cronin
Journal:  Am J Clin Pathol       Date:  2011-10       Impact factor: 2.493

6.  Selective BRAFV600E inhibition enhances T-cell recognition of melanoma without affecting lymphocyte function.

Authors:  Andrea Boni; Alexandria P Cogdill; Ping Dang; Durga Udayakumar; Ching-Ni Jenny Njauw; Callum M Sloss; Cristina R Ferrone; Keith T Flaherty; Donald P Lawrence; David E Fisher; Hensin Tsao; Jennifer A Wargo
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2010-06-15       Impact factor: 12.701

7.  Vemurafenib in patients with BRAF(V600) mutation-positive melanoma with symptomatic brain metastases: final results of an open-label pilot study.

Authors:  Reinhard Dummer; Simone M Goldinger; Christian P Turtschi; Nina B Eggmann; Olivier Michielin; Lada Mitchell; Luisa Veronese; Paul René Hilfiker; Lea Felderer; Jeannine D Rinderknecht
Journal:  Eur J Cancer       Date:  2013-11-29       Impact factor: 9.162

8.  COT drives resistance to RAF inhibition through MAP kinase pathway reactivation.

Authors:  Cory M Johannessen; Jesse S Boehm; So Young Kim; Sapana R Thomas; Leslie Wardwell; Laura A Johnson; Caroline M Emery; Nicolas Stransky; Alexandria P Cogdill; Jordi Barretina; Giordano Caponigro; Haley Hieronymus; Ryan R Murray; Kourosh Salehi-Ashtiani; David E Hill; Marc Vidal; Jean J Zhao; Xiaoping Yang; Ozan Alkan; Sungjoon Kim; Jennifer L Harris; Christopher J Wilson; Vic E Myer; Peter M Finan; David E Root; Thomas M Roberts; Todd Golub; Keith T Flaherty; Reinhard Dummer; Barbara L Weber; William R Sellers; Robert Schlegel; Jennifer A Wargo; William C Hahn; Levi A Garraway
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2010-11-24       Impact factor: 49.962

9.  RAF inhibitor resistance is mediated by dimerization of aberrantly spliced BRAF(V600E).

Authors:  Poulikos I Poulikakos; Yogindra Persaud; Manickam Janakiraman; Xiangju Kong; Charles Ng; Gatien Moriceau; Hubing Shi; Mohammad Atefi; Bjoern Titz; May Tal Gabay; Maayan Salton; Kimberly B Dahlman; Madhavi Tadi; Jennifer A Wargo; Keith T Flaherty; Mark C Kelley; Tom Misteli; Paul B Chapman; Jeffrey A Sosman; Thomas G Graeber; Antoni Ribas; Roger S Lo; Neal Rosen; David B Solit
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2011-11-23       Impact factor: 49.962

10.  Tumor homogeneity between primary and metastatic sites for BRAF status in metastatic melanoma determined by immunohistochemical and molecular testing.

Authors:  Lucile Boursault; Véronique Haddad; Béatrice Vergier; David Cappellen; Severine Verdon; Jean-Pierre Bellocq; Thomas Jouary; Jean-Philippe Merlio
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-08-20       Impact factor: 3.240

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  49 in total

Review 1.  Recent advances in the treatment of melanoma with BRAF and MEK inhibitors.

Authors:  Eva Muñoz-Couselo; Jesús Soberino García; José Manuel Pérez-García; Vanesa Ortega Cebrián; Javier Cortés Castán
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2015-09

2.  The Ezh2 polycomb group protein drives an aggressive phenotype in melanoma cancer stem cells and is a target of diet derived sulforaphane.

Authors:  Matthew L Fisher; Gautam Adhikary; Dan Grun; David M Kaetzel; Richard L Eckert
Journal:  Mol Carcinog       Date:  2015-12-23       Impact factor: 4.784

Review 3.  Challenges and Opportunities for Childhood Cancer Drug Development.

Authors:  Peter J Houghton; Raushan T Kurmasheva
Journal:  Pharmacol Rev       Date:  2019-10       Impact factor: 25.468

Review 4.  BRAF in malignant melanoma progression and metastasis: potentials and challenges.

Authors:  Aljawharah Alqathama
Journal:  Am J Cancer Res       Date:  2020-04-01       Impact factor: 6.166

5.  Identification of the Serine Biosynthesis Pathway as a Critical Component of BRAF Inhibitor Resistance of Melanoma, Pancreatic, and Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Cells.

Authors:  Kayleigh C Ross; Andrew J Andrews; Christopher D Marion; Timothy J Yen; Vikram Bhattacharjee
Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther       Date:  2017-05-12       Impact factor: 6.261

Review 6.  Toward Smarter Lumping and Smarter Splitting: Rethinking Strategies for Sepsis and Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Clinical Trial Design.

Authors:  Hallie C Prescott; Carolyn S Calfee; B Taylor Thompson; Derek C Angus; Vincent X Liu
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2016-07-15       Impact factor: 21.405

Review 7.  NRAS mutant melanoma: an overview for the clinician for melanoma management.

Authors:  Russell W Jenkins; Ryan J Sullivan
Journal:  Melanoma Manag       Date:  2016-02-17

8.  Inhibition of the CRAF/prohibitin interaction reverses CRAF-dependent resistance to vemurafenib.

Authors:  N A Doudican; S J Orlow
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2016-06-20       Impact factor: 9.867

9.  HSP70 Inhibition Limits FAK-Dependent Invasion and Enhances the Response to Melanoma Treatment with BRAF Inhibitors.

Authors:  Anna Budina-Kolomets; Marie R Webster; Julia I-Ju Leu; Matthew Jennis; Clemens Krepler; Anastasia Guerrini; Andrew V Kossenkov; Wei Xu; Giorgos Karakousis; Lynn Schuchter; Ravi K Amaravadi; Hong Wu; Xiangfan Yin; Qin Liu; Yiling Lu; Gordon B Mills; Xiaowei Xu; Donna L George; Ashani T Weeraratna; Maureen E Murphy
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2016-03-16       Impact factor: 12.701

Review 10.  Transglutaminase is a tumor cell and cancer stem cell survival factor.

Authors:  Richard L Eckert; Matthew L Fisher; Dan Grun; Gautam Adhikary; Wen Xu; Candace Kerr
Journal:  Mol Carcinog       Date:  2015-08-10       Impact factor: 4.784

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