Literature DB >> 25682222

Molecular targeted therapies in advanced or metastatic chordoma patients: facts and hypotheses.

Loïc Lebellec1, Sébastien Aubert2, Fahed Zaïri3, Thomas Ryckewaert1, Bruno Chauffert4, Nicolas Penel5.   

Abstract

Chordomas, derived from undifferentiated notochordal remnants, represent less than 4% of bone primary tumors. Despite surgery followed by radiotherapy, local and metastatic relapses are frequent. In case of locally advanced or metastatic chordomas, medical treatment is frequently discussed. While chemotherapy is ineffective, it would appear that some molecular targeted therapies, in particular imatinib, could slow down the tumor growth in case-reports, retrospective series, and phase I or II trials. Nineteen publications, between January 1990 and September 2014, have been found describing the activity of these targeted therapies. A systematic analysis of these publications shows that the best objective response with targeted therapies was stabilization in 52 to 69% of chordomas. Given the indolent course of advanced chordoma and because of the absence of randomized trial, the level of evidence to treat chordomas with molecular therapy is low (level III), whatever the drug. Furthermore, we could not draw firm conclusion on the activity of imatinib. Other putative targets have also been described. Therefore, further clinical trials are expected, especially with these targets. Nevertheless, it seems essential, in those future studies, to consider the naturally slow course of the disease.
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Chordomas; Imatinib; Molecular targeted therapies; Review

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25682222     DOI: 10.1016/j.critrevonc.2015.01.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Rev Oncol Hematol        ISSN: 1040-8428            Impact factor:   6.312


  9 in total

1.  A potential therapy for chordoma via antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity employing NK or high-affinity NK cells in combination with cetuximab.

Authors:  Rika Fujii; Jeffrey Schlom; James W Hodge
Journal:  J Neurosurg       Date:  2017-07-28       Impact factor: 5.115

2.  First report of clinical responses to immunotherapy in 3 relapsing cases of chordoma after failure of standard therapies.

Authors:  Denis Migliorini; Nicolas Mach; Diego Aguiar; Rémi Vernet; Basile Nicolas Landis; Minerva Becker; Thomas McKee; Valérie Dutoit; Pierre-Yves Dietrich
Journal:  Oncoimmunology       Date:  2017-06-21       Impact factor: 8.110

3.  EGFR inhibitors identified as a potential treatment for chordoma in a focused compound screen.

Authors:  Susanne Scheipl; Michelle Barnard; Lucia Cottone; Mette Jorgensen; David H Drewry; William J Zuercher; Fabrice Turlais; Hongtao Ye; Ana P Leite; James A Smith; Andreas Leithner; Peter Möller; Silke Brüderlein; Naomi Guppy; Fernanda Amary; Roberto Tirabosco; Sandra J Strauss; Nischalan Pillay; Adrienne M Flanagan
Journal:  J Pathol       Date:  2016-05-31       Impact factor: 7.996

4.  The embryonic transcription factor Brachyury confers chordoma chemoresistance via upregulating CA9.

Authors:  Jiao Jian; Nanzhe Zhong; Dongjie Jiang; Lei Li; Yan Lou; Wang Zhou; Su Chen; Jianru Xiao
Journal:  Am J Transl Res       Date:  2018-03-15       Impact factor: 4.060

5.  Sorafenib in patients with locally advanced and metastatic chordomas: a phase II trial of the French Sarcoma Group (GSF/GETO).

Authors:  E Bompas; A Le Cesne; E Tresch-Bruneel; L Lebellec; V Laurence; O Collard; E Saada-Bouzid; N Isambert; J Y Blay; E Y Amela; S Salas; C Chevreau; F Bertucci; A Italiano; S Clisant; N Penel
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2015-07-22       Impact factor: 32.976

6.  Tumor Reduction with Pazopanib in a Patient with Recurrent Lumbar Chordoma.

Authors:  Maurício Fernando Silva Almeida Ribeiro; Micelange Carvalho de Sousa; Samir Abdallah Hanna; Marcos Vinicius Calfat Maldaun; Ceci Obara Kurimori; Luiz Guilherme Cernaglia Aureliano de Lima; Romulo Loss Mattedi; Rodrigo Ramella Munhoz
Journal:  Case Rep Oncol Med       Date:  2018-04-10

7.  Circulating vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) as predictive factor of progression-free survival in patients with advanced chordoma receiving sorafenib: an analysis from a phase II trial of the french sarcoma group (GSF/GETO).

Authors:  Loic Lebellec; François Bertucci; Emmanuelle Tresch-Bruneel; Emmanuelle Bompas; Yves Toiron; Luc Camoin; Olivier Mir; Valerie Laurence; Stephanie Clisant; Emilie Decoupigny; Jean-Yves Blay; Anthony Goncalves; Nicolas Penel
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2016-11-08

8.  Application of nomograms to predict overall and cancer-specific survival in patients with chordoma.

Authors:  Weipeng Zheng; Yuanping Huang; Tianwang Guan; Songfang Lu; Liquan Yao; Senrui Wu; Haoyi Chen; Ning Wang; YingJie Liang; Wende Xiao; Xin Jiang; Shifeng Wen
Journal:  J Bone Oncol       Date:  2019-06-24       Impact factor: 4.072

9.  miR-1290 inhibits chordoma cell proliferation and invasion by targeting Robo1.

Authors:  Bin Wang; Kai Zhang; Hao Chen; Jian Lu; Guizhong Wu; Huilin Yang; Kangwu Chen
Journal:  Transl Cancer Res       Date:  2019-04       Impact factor: 1.241

  9 in total

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