Literature DB >> 27258969

Implementation of mechanism of action biology-driven early drug development for children with cancer.

Andrew D J Pearson1, Ralf Herold2, Raphaël Rousseau3, Chris Copland4, Brigid Bradley-Garelik5, Debbie Binner6, Renaud Capdeville7, Hubert Caron8, Jacqueline Carleer9, Louis Chesler10, Birgit Geoerger11, Pamela Kearns12, Lynley V Marshall13, Stefan M Pfister14, Gudrun Schleiermacher15, Jeffrey Skolnik16, Cesare Spadoni17, Jaroslav Sterba18, Hendrick van den Berg2, Martina Uttenreuther-Fischer19, Olaf Witt20, Koen Norga21, Gilles Vassal22.   

Abstract

An urgent need remains for new paediatric oncology drugs to cure children who die from cancer and to reduce drug-related sequelae in survivors. In 2007, the European Paediatric Regulation came into law requiring industry to create paediatric drug (all types of medicinal products) development programmes alongside those for adults. Unfortunately, paediatric drug development is still largely centred on adult conditions and not a mechanism of action (MoA)-based model, even though this would be more logical for childhood tumours as these have much fewer non-synonymous coding mutations than adult malignancies. Recent large-scale sequencing by International Genome Consortium and Paediatric Cancer Genome Project has further shown that the genetic and epigenetic repertoire of driver mutations in specific childhood malignancies differs from more common adult-type malignancies. To bring about much needed change, a Paediatric Platform, ACCELERATE, was proposed in 2013 by the Cancer Drug Development Forum, Innovative Therapies for Children with Cancer, the European Network for Cancer Research in Children and Adolescents and the European Society for Paediatric Oncology. The Platform, comprising multiple stakeholders in paediatric oncology, has three working groups, one with responsibility for promoting and developing high-quality MoA-informed paediatric drug development programmes, including specific measures for adolescents. Key is the establishment of a freely accessible aggregated database of paediatric biological tumour drug targets to be aligned with an aggregated pipeline of drugs. This will enable prioritisation and conduct of early phase clinical paediatric trials to evaluate these drugs against promising therapeutic targets and to generate clinical paediatric efficacy and safety data in an accelerated time frame. Through this work, the Platform seeks to ensure that potentially effective drugs, where the MoA is known and thought to be relevant to paediatric malignancies, are evaluated in early phase clinical trials, and that this approach to generate pre-clinical and clinical data is systematically pursued by academia, sponsors, industry, and regulatory bodies to bring new paediatric oncology drugs to front-line therapy more rapidly.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Mechanism of action; Paediatric oncology; Targeted cancer drug development

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27258969     DOI: 10.1016/j.ejca.2016.04.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Cancer        ISSN: 0959-8049            Impact factor:   9.162


  10 in total

Review 1.  Early phase clinical trials of anticancer agents in children and adolescents - an ITCC perspective.

Authors:  Lucas Moreno; Andrew D J Pearson; Xavier Paoletti; Irene Jimenez; Birgit Geoerger; Pamela R Kearns; C Michel Zwaan; Francois Doz; Andre Baruchel; Josef Vormoor; Michela Casanova; Stefan M Pfister; Bruce Morland; Gilles Vassal
Journal:  Nat Rev Clin Oncol       Date:  2017-05-16       Impact factor: 66.675

2.  The landscape of genomic alterations across childhood cancers.

Authors:  Susanne N Gröbner; Barbara C Worst; Joachim Weischenfeldt; Ivo Buchhalter; Kortine Kleinheinz; Vasilisa A Rudneva; Pascal D Johann; Gnana Prakash Balasubramanian; Maia Segura-Wang; Sebastian Brabetz; Sebastian Bender; Barbara Hutter; Dominik Sturm; Elke Pfaff; Daniel Hübschmann; Gideon Zipprich; Michael Heinold; Jürgen Eils; Christian Lawerenz; Serap Erkek; Sander Lambo; Sebastian Waszak; Claudia Blattmann; Arndt Borkhardt; Michaela Kuhlen; Angelika Eggert; Simone Fulda; Manfred Gessler; Jenny Wegert; Roland Kappler; Daniel Baumhoer; Stefan Burdach; Renate Kirschner-Schwabe; Udo Kontny; Andreas E Kulozik; Dietmar Lohmann; Simone Hettmer; Cornelia Eckert; Stefan Bielack; Michaela Nathrath; Charlotte Niemeyer; Günther H Richter; Johannes Schulte; Reiner Siebert; Frank Westermann; Jan J Molenaar; Gilles Vassal; Hendrik Witt; Birgit Burkhardt; Christian P Kratz; Olaf Witt; Cornelis M van Tilburg; Christof M Kramm; Gudrun Fleischhack; Uta Dirksen; Stefan Rutkowski; Michael Frühwald; Katja von Hoff; Stephan Wolf; Thomas Klingebiel; Ewa Koscielniak; Pablo Landgraf; Jan Koster; Adam C Resnick; Jinghui Zhang; Yanling Liu; Xin Zhou; Angela J Waanders; Danny A Zwijnenburg; Pichai Raman; Benedikt Brors; Ursula D Weber; Paul A Northcott; Kristian W Pajtler; Marcel Kool; Rosario M Piro; Jan O Korbel; Matthias Schlesner; Roland Eils; David T W Jones; Peter Lichter; Lukas Chavez; Marc Zapatka; Stefan M Pfister
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2018-02-28       Impact factor: 49.962

Review 3.  Opportunities and Challenges in Drug Development for Pediatric Cancers.

Authors:  Theodore W Laetsch; Steven G DuBois; Julia Glade Bender; Margaret E Macy; Lucas Moreno
Journal:  Cancer Discov       Date:  2020-12-04       Impact factor: 38.272

Review 4.  Precision medicine in pediatric oncology.

Authors:  Suzanne J Forrest; Birgit Geoerger; Katherine A Janeway
Journal:  Curr Opin Pediatr       Date:  2018-02       Impact factor: 2.856

5.  Joint adolescent-adult early phase clinical trials to improve access to new drugs for adolescents with cancer: proposals from the multi-stakeholder platform-ACCELERATE.

Authors:  N Gaspar; L V Marshall; D Binner; R Herold; R Rousseau; P Blanc; R Capdeville; J Carleer; C Copland; Y Kerloeguen; K Norga; L Pacaud; M-A Sevaux; C Spadoni; J Sterba; F Ligas; T Taube; M Uttenreuther-Fischer; S Chioato; M A O'Connell; B Geoerger; J-Y Blay; J C Soria; S Kaye; B Wulff; L Brugières; G Vassal; A D J Pearson
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2018-03-01       Impact factor: 32.976

6.  Importance of Comprehensive Molecular Profiling for Clinical Outcome in Children With Recurrent Cancer.

Authors:  Olga Østrup; Karsten Nysom; David Scheie; Ane Y Schmidt; Rene Mathiasen; Lisa L Hjalgrim; Tina E Olsen; Jane Skjøth-Rasmussen; Birthe M Henriksen; Finn C Nielsen; Peder S Wehner; Henrik Schrøder; Astrid M Sehested; Catherine Rechnitzer; Maria Rossing
Journal:  Front Pediatr       Date:  2018-04-20       Impact factor: 3.418

Review 7.  Navigating the Regulatory Landscape to Develop Pediatric Oncology Drugs: Expert Opinion Recommendations.

Authors:  Elly Barry; Darrin Beaupre; Eileen Blasi; Jaimie A Walsh; Scott L Weinrich; Daniel R Arenson; Ira A Jacobs
Journal:  Paediatr Drugs       Date:  2021-06-26       Impact factor: 3.022

8.  Use case driven evaluation of open databases for pediatric cancer research.

Authors:  Fleur Jeanquartier; Claire Jean-Quartier; Andreas Holzinger
Journal:  BioData Min       Date:  2019-01-15       Impact factor: 2.522

9.  Gap between pediatric and adult approvals of molecular targeted drugs.

Authors:  Satoshi Nishiwaki; Yuichi Ando
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-10-13       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 10.  The Promise of Patient-Derived Preclinical Models to Accelerate the Implementation of Personalised Medicine for Children with Neuroblastoma.

Authors:  Elizabeth R Tucker; Sally George; Paola Angelini; Alejandra Bruna; Louis Chesler
Journal:  J Pers Med       Date:  2021-03-30
  10 in total

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