| Literature DB >> 26224133 |
Teresa Helsten1, Maria Schwaederle2, Razelle Kurzrock3.
Abstract
Fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) and their receptors (FGFRs) are transmembrane growth factor receptors with wide tissue distribution. FGF/FGFR signaling is involved in neoplastic behavior and also development, differentiation, growth, and survival. FGFR germline mutations (activating) can cause skeletal disorders, primarily dwarfism (generally mutations in FGFR3), and craniofacial malformation syndromes (usually mutations in FGFR1 and FGFR2); intriguingly, some of these activating FGFR mutations are also seen in human cancers. FGF/FGFR aberrations reported in cancers are mainly thought to be gain-of-function changes, and several cancers have high frequencies of FGFR alterations, including breast, bladder, or squamous cell carcinomas (lung and head and neck). FGF ligand aberrations (predominantly gene amplifications) are also frequently seen in cancers, in contrast to hereditary syndromes. There are several pharmacologic agents that have been or are being developed for inhibition of FGFR/FGF signaling. These include both highly selective inhibitors as well as multi-kinase inhibitors. Of note, only four agents (ponatinib, pazopanib, regorafenib, and recently lenvatinib) are FDA-approved for use in cancer, although the approval was not based on their activity against FGFR. Perturbations in the FGFR/FGF signaling are present in both inherited and malignant diseases. The development of potent inhibitors targeting FGF/FGFR may provide new tools against disorders caused by FGF/FGFR alterations.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Cancer therapy; FGF; FGFR; Genetics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26224133 PMCID: PMC4573649 DOI: 10.1007/s10555-015-9579-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Metastasis Rev ISSN: 0167-7659 Impact factor: 9.264
Fig. 1FGF/FGFR activation in cancer and inhibitors. a The activation of FGF/FGFR signaling in cancer. The structure of FGF/FGFR comprises two receptor molecules, two FGFs, and one heparan sulfate proteoglycan chain. The FGFRs are formed by three immunoglobulin domains (IgI–III), a transmembrane helix, and intracellular tyrosine kinase domains. The mechanisms driving FGF signaling in cancer can be divided into two categories: first, genomic alterations of FGFR that can lead to ligand-independent receptor signaling and, second, alterations that support a ligand-dependent signaling activation. Following FGF binding to FGFR and heterodimerization, the tyrosine kinase domains phosphorylate each other, leading to the activation of key downstream pathways. b Examples of FGF/FGFR inhibitors; asterisk denotes FDA-approved drugs in cancer; Ab = Antibody; FP-1039 (GSK3052230) is a ligand trap, i.e., sequesters FGFs and inhibits their signaling [71]. c The interactions between FGFs and FGFRs; references: Guillemot et al. [32], Powers et al. [191], Ornitz et al. [192], Zhang et al. [34]. Interaction between FGF ligands and receptors is an evolving field; variability may be observed between studies and tissue types. 1FGF11-14 are not ligands for FGFRs and are known as FGF homologous factors (FHF1–4)[28, 29]. There is no human FGF15
Examples of FGFR aberrations in inherited syndromes
| Gene chromosome aberration | Syndrome (OMIM number) | Clinical features | Examples of cancers in which an aberration is seen | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FGFR1 (Chr 8p) | ||||
| P252R | Pfeiffer syndrome, type I (01600) |
| None reported | [ |
| Y372C | Osteoglophonic dysplasia (166250) | Craniosynostosis, telechanthus, facial hypoplasia, prominent supraorbital ridge, depressed nasal bridge, and rhizomelic dwarfism | None reported | [ |
| FGFR2 (Chr 10q) S252W or P253R (most common) | Apert syndrome (101200) | Craniosynostosis, midface hypoplasia, syndactyly of the hands and feet, tendency to fusion of bony structures, varying mental deficiency, and hearing loss. Increased number and maturation of pre-osteoblasts | Endometrial cancers (S252W and P253R) | [ |
| Multiple mutations reported [ | Crouzon syndrome (123500) | Craniosynostosis, hypertelorism, exophthalmos, external strabismus, parrot-beaked nose, short upper lip, hypoplastic maxilla, and relative mandibular prognathism | Gastric cancer (S267P) | [ |
| S252L, S267P | Pfeiffer syndrome, type 2 and 3 (101600) |
| Gastric cancer (S267P) | [ |
| FGFR3 (Chr 4p) | ||||
| G380R, S279C G375C | Achondroplasia (100800) | Most frequent form of dwarfism: short stature, rhizomelic shortening of limbs, frontal bossing, midface hypoplasia, exaggerated lumbar lordosis, limitation of elbow extension, genu varum, and trident hand | Bladder, prostate, and testicular cancers (G380R) | [ |
| R248C, S249C, R373C, Ter807G/R/C, G370C, N540L, Q485R | Thanatophoric dysplasia I (TDI) (187600) | Severe dwarfism; usually fatal in the neonatal period. Curved short femurs with or without cloverleaf skull | Bladder (R248C, S249C, G370C), Prostate (S249C), Lung squamous (R248C, S249C), Head and Neck (S249C), Multiple Myeloma (R248C) | [ |
| K650E | Thanatophoric dysplasia II (187601) | Severe dwarfism; usually fatal in the neonatal period. Straight, short femurs with cloverleaf skull | Multiple Myeloma, Bladder, Glioblastoma | [ |
| N540K/T/S I538V, K650N/Q, L652Q, Y278C S84L | Hypochondroplasia (146000) | Dwarfism, lumbar lordosis, short and broad bones, and caudal narrowing of the interpediculate distance of the lumbar spine. Some resemblance to achondroplasia, but is much milder | Renal cell carcinoma (K650N) | [ |
| P250R | Muenke syndrome (602849) | Coronal synostosis, macrocephaly, midface hypoplasia, developmental delay. Variable phenotype | None reported | [ |
Chr chromosome, FGF fibroblast growth factor, FGFR fibroblast growth factor receptor, OMIM Online Medelian Inheritance in Man (http://www.omim.org/)
Specific examples of FGFR alterations in cancer
| Activating | Examples of disease(s) (most common) | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Amplifications | ||
| FGFR1 | Squamous cell carcinoma of lung, breast adenocarcinoma, bladder urothelial carcinoma, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | [ |
| FGFR2 | Gastric adenocarcinoma | [ |
| FGFR3 | Uterine carcinosarcoma, ovarian cystadenocarcinoma, sarcoma | [ |
| FGFR4 | Kidney, renal clear cell carcinoma | [ |
| Mutations | ||
| FGFR1 | Stomach adenocarcinoma, melanoma | [ |
| FGFR2 | Uterine (endometrial carcinoma), melanomaa | [ |
| FGFR3 | High-grade bladder cancer, cervical cancer | [ |
| FGFR4 | Rhabdomyosarcoma, melanoma | [ |
| Rearrangements | ||
| FGFR1 | 8p11 myeloproliferative syndrome/fusions partners: | [ |
| Rhabdomyosarcoma/fusions partner: | [ | |
| Glioblastoma/fusions partner: | [ | |
| Salivary gland/fusions partner: | [ | |
| FGFR2 | Cholangiocarcinoma/fusions partners: | [ |
| Breast/fusions partners: | [ | |
| FGFR3 | Multiple myeloma/fusions partner: | [ |
| Glioblastoma, bladder carcinoma, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma/fusions partner: | [ | |
aFGFR2 mutations may be loss of function
Examples of FGFR mutations and copy number alterations in cancer
| Type of cancer | Approximate frequency | Approximate frequencies by FGF receptora | Comments | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bladder urothelial carcinoma | 35 % | FGFR1 14 %FGFR3 19 % | FGFR1 almost all amplifications | [ |
| Lung, squamous cell carcinoma | 27 % | FGFR1 18 %FGFR3 4 % | FGFR1: Almost all are gene amplifications | [ |
| Uterine corpus endometrioid carcinoma | 24 % | FGFR1 7 %FGFR3 5 % | FGFR1 approximately 50 % amplification and 50 % mutations | [ |
| Gastric adenocarcinoma | 23 % | FGFR1 6 %FGFR3 4 % | Approximately 50 % amplifications/deletions and 50 % mutations | [ |
| Breast adenocarcinoma | 20 % | FGFR1 14 % FGFR3 2 % | Almost all are amplifications | [ |
| Melanoma | 20 % | FGFR1 5 %FGFR3 5 % | FGFR2 mostly mutations | [ |
| Ovarian serous cystadenocarcinoma | 20 % | FGFR1 5 %FGFR3 8 % | Almost all amplifications, rare mutations | [ |
| Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | 17 % | FGFR1 10 %FGFR3 4 % | Majority of amplification with about 20 % deletion and mutations (each), and few fusions | [ |
| Lung, adenocarcinoma | 14 % | FGFR1 6 %FGFR3 2 % | Approximately 50 % amplifications and 50 % mutations, with predominance of FGFR1 amplification | [ |
| Prostate adenocarcinoma | 11 % | FGFR1 6 %FGFR3 1 % | Approximately 50 % amplification, 50 % deletions, mutations rare | [ |
| Renal cell carcinoma, clear cell | 11 % | FGFR1 2 %FGFR3 1 % | Majority amplifications | [ |
| Sarcoma | 10 % | FGFR1 4 %FGFR3 4 % | Majority amplifications ( | [ |
| Renal papillary cell | 9 % | FGFR1 4 %FGFR3 2 % | All mutations, only 2 cases had amplification | [ |
| Colorectal adenocarcinoma | 8 % | FGFR1 5 %FGFR3 1 % | FGFR1 about 60 % amplification, rest mutations/deletion | [ |
| Glioblastoma | 6 % | FGFR1 0 %FGFR3 2 % | FGFR2 mostly deletions | [ |
| Adenoid cystic carcinoma | 5 % | FGFR1 3 %FGFR3 0 % | FGFR1 amplification and deletion (1 each) | |
| [ | ||||
| Brain, lower grade gliomas | 5 % | FGFR1 0 %FGFR3 1 % | Most are deletions, with few amplifications and mutations | [ |
| Acute myeloid leukemia | 1 % | FGFR1 < 1 %FGFR3 0 % | 1 amplification, 1 deletion, no mutations | [ |
| Thyroid carcinoma | <1 % | FGFR1 0 %FGFR3 < 1 % | Two amplifications, one mutation | [ |
See also Fig. 2 for illustration (bar graph)
FGF fibroblast growth factor, FGFR fibroblast growth factor receptor
aData extracted/analyzed based on cbioportal at http://www.cbioportal.org/public-portal (accessed November 2014). Most of the studies included >200 patients
Examples of FGF ligand mutations and copy number aberrations in cancer
| Type of cancer | Approximate frequency | Approximate frequencies by FGF liganda | Comments | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | 54 % | FGF3 28 %FGF12 19 % | Virtually all amplifications | [ |
| Bladder urothelial carcinoma | 47 % | FGF3 13 %FGF1711% | FGF3, FGF4, and FGF19 co-amplified in approximately 12 % of cases | [ |
| Stomach cancer | 47 % | FGF3 7 %FGF12 8 % | FGF3/4/19 co-amplified in 7 % of cases | [ |
| Lung, squamous cell carcinoma | 46 % | FGF3 12 %FGF12 26 % | Virtually all are gene amplifications | [ |
| Cervical cancerb | 42 % | FGF12 25 % | All are amplifications | [ |
| Lung, adenocarcinoma | 39 % | FGF10 11 % | FGF10 mostly amplifications | [ |
| Melanoma | 38 % | FGF3 8 % | FGF3/4/19 co-amplified in about 7 % of cases | [ |
| Ovarian cystadenocarcinoma | 38 % | FGF3 5 %FGF6 5 % | Virtually all amplifications | [ |
| Breast adenocarcinoma | 35 % | FGF3 15 %FGF17 6 % | High frequency of co-amplification of FGF3/4/19. Similar results with TCGA, Nature 2012 study ( | [ |
| Adenoid cystic carcinoma | 27 % | FGF22 10 % | Approximately 50 % deletions and 50 % amplifications, rare mutations | [ |
| Prostate adenocarcinoma | 22 % | FGF17 8 % | Majority are deletions, about 5 % cases are co-deleted FGF17/20 | [ |
| Colorectal adenocarcinoma | 17 % | All 5 % or less | Majority of mutations, less amplifications and rare deletion | [ |
See also Fig. 3 for illustration (bar graph)
FGF fibroblast growth factor
aIncluded FGFs with alteration frequency ≥5 % and at least 5 cases with the alteration. Extracted/analyzed in part based on cbioportal at http://www.cbioportal.org/public-portal (accessed November 2014)
bSquamous cell carcinoma and endocervical adenocarcinoma. Abbreviations: FGF = fibroblast growth factor. See also Fig. 3 for illustration (bar graph)
Fig. 2Approximate frequencies of FGFR alterations in diverse cancers. Data was extracted/analyzed based on cbioportal at http://www.cbioportal.org/public-portal (accessed November 2014). Most of the studies included >200 patients. Alterations in FGFR1, FGFR2, FGFR3, and FGFR4 were included. Please refer to Table 3 for more details and additional references. Abbreviations: FGFR = fibroblast growth factor receptor
Fig. 3Approximate frequencies of FGF ligand alterations in diverse cancers. Data was extracted/analyzed based on data from cbioportal at http://www.cbioportal.org/public-portal (accessed November 2014). Cervical cancer included squamous cell carcinoma and endocervical adenocarcinoma. Please refer to Table 4 for more details and additional references. Abbreviations: FGF = fibroblast growth factor
Examples of drugs that inhibit FGF/FGFR pathway signaling
| Drug | Company/type of drug | Examples of target(s) | FDA-approved | Examples of clinical development/trials/phase | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ARQ087 | ArQule/ | FGFR1/2/3 | No | Phase I Dose Escalation Study | [ |
| AZD4547 | Astrazeneca/ | FGFR1/2/3 | No | Phase II | [ |
| Brivanib | BMS/ | FGFR1/2/3, VEGFR | No | Phase III hepatocellular; did not meet endpoint of survival non-inferiority | [ |
| Danusertib | Nerviano Medical Sciences/multi-kinase inhibitor | FGFR1, BCR-Abl, c- | No | Phase II in unselected prostate cancer showed minimal activity | [ |
| Debio1347 | Debiopharm/ | FGFR1/2/3 | No | Phase I (selecting patient with FGFRs alterations) | [ |
| Dovitinib | Novartis/ | FGFR1/3, PDGFR, VEGFR, Flt3, c-kit | No | Phase III: renal cell carcinoma | [ |
| FP-1039 | GlaxoSmithKline/ | Sequesters | No | Phase I (selecting patients with deregulated Fibroblast Growth Factor (FGF) Pathway Signaling) | [ |
| JNJ-42756493 | Janssen/ | FGFR1/2/3/4 | No | Phase I | [ |
| Lenvatinib | Esai/ | PDGFR | Yes | Phase III:FDA- approved for thyroid cancer (Feb 2015) | [ |
| Lucitanib | Clovis/ | FGFR1/2 and | No | Phase II: ER-positive breast cancer | [ |
| MGFR1877S (RG744) | Genentech/ | Anti-FGFR3 | No | Phase I | [ |
| MK2461 | Merck/ | FGFR1/2/3, PDGFR, c-Met, Flt1/3, Ron, Mer | No | Phase II | [ |
| Nintedanib | Boehringer Ingelheim/ | FGFR1/2/3, VEGFR, PDGFR, flt3 | Yes (not in cancer) | Phase III: ovarian, lung, FDA-approved for idiopathic | [ |
| NVP-BGJ398 | Novartis/ | FGFR1/2/3 | No | Phase II | [ |
| Pazopanib | GlaxoSmithKline/ | FGFR1/3, VEGFR1/2/3, PDGFR, c-Kit | Yes | Approved for advanced renal cell carcinoma and soft tissue sarcoma | [ |
| Ponatinib | Ariad/ | FGFR1-4, BCR-Abl, PDGFR, VEGFR | Yes | Approved for T315I-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia and Ph-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia | [ |
| Regorafenib | Bayer/ | FGFR1/2, RET, VEGFR1/2/3 KIT, PDGFRs | Yes | Approved for advanced GIST and colorectal cancer (no FGFR selection) | [ |
| TAS120 | Taiho Oncology/ | FGFR1/2/3/4 | No | Phase I/II (selecting patient with FGFRs alterations) | [ |
The IC50 (half-maximal inhibitory concentration) was <100 nmol/L for all the drugs included, except regorafenib
FGFR fibroblast growth factor receptor, GIST gastrointestinal stromal tumor