| Literature DB >> 27814715 |
Shahil Amin1,2, Oliver F Bathe3,4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rapidly expanding arsenal of chemotherapeutic agents approved in the past 5 years represents significant progress in the field. However, this poses a challenge for oncologists to choose which drug or combination of drugs is best for any individual. Because only a fraction of patients respond to any drug, efforts have been made to devise strategies to personalize care. The majority of efforts have involved development of predictive biomarkers. While there are notable successes, there are no predictive biomarkers for most drugs. Moreover, predictive biomarkers enrich the cohort of individuals likely to benefit; they do not guarantee benefit. MAIN TEXT: There is a need to devise alternate strategies to tailor cancer care. One alternative approach is to enhance the current adaptive approach, which involves administration of a drug and cessation of treatment once progression is documented. This currently involves radiographic tests for the most part, which are expensive, inconvenient and imperfect in their ability to categorize patients who are and are not benefiting from treatment. A biomarker approach to categorizing response may have advantages.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptive biomarker; Assessing response; Cancer; Predictive biomarker; RECIST; Response Biomarker; Systemic therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27814715 PMCID: PMC5097425 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2886-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1The drug development pipeline for cancer. a Number of drugs approved each year by the FDA for the treatment of cancer, since 1999. Figure is derived from the annual briefs on New Molecular Entity and New biologic Approvals [74]. b Probability of success in advancing a proposed therapeutic compound from phase 1 clinical trials to FDA approval. Data are derived from Hay et al. [75]
Potential benefits of response biomarkers
| Benefits to the Patient | Effects on Clinical Practice | Socioeconomic Benefits | Benefits to Industry |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimal exposure to potentially toxic drugs that are unbeneficial. | Can tailor therapy for patients by development of a biomarker that reflects chemosensitivity and resistance. | Payors (including insurance companies and patients) will pay much less for ineffective drugs. | Clinical trial design would be revolutionized: a) Will provide a new trial endpoint for phase I trials, enabling identification of appropriate doses and patient populations with less harm to trial participants. b) Phase II trials can be performed more quickly, using the biomarker as a surrogate marker for benefit. c) Would greatly facilitate a “go-no go” phase II-III adaptive designs106. |
| Reduced cumulative toxicities will improve quality of life. | The current practice is to administer a drug until toxicities or disease progression occur. A response biomarker may inform on early chemoresistance. This has the following benefits: a) Inappropriate dose escalations can be avoided. b) Inappropriately prolonged treatments can be avoided. c) Possibility of rotating to a new potentially effective drug regime before progression and clinical deterioration occur. | Patients whose quality of life is preserved and whose disease is controlled with less toxicity will be more likely to be able to resume normal work activities. | Subpopulations that will benefit from drugs will be more easily identified. |
| Preservation of performance status will facilitate administration of later lines of therapy. | May enable dose titration: lowest effective dose for an individual could be administered. | Novel drug development will be less expensive and more efficient. This may translate to development of more, less costly drugs. | It may become cost effective to screen agents for use in rare cancers. |
| A response biomarker may expand the therapeutic armamentarium available for patients: low cost trials of drugs on individuals. | A serum biomarker of response would enhance treatment of patients with malignant conditions that are difficult to gauge radiologically e.g. peritoneal disease, bile duct cancer and esophagogastric cancer. | There may be less need for predictive biomarkers, which are specific to each drug, and which take years to develop and validate. |
Characteristics of the ideal response biomarker
| Sufficiently sensitive to detect even minor responses that induce disease stabilization. |
| Specific. Its absence accurately reflects chemoresistance. |
| Appears rapidly as a result of a response to therapy. |
| Agnostic to class of antineoplastic drugs. |
| Applicable to all tumor types. |
| Easy to measure, amenable to high-throughput testing. |
| Inexpensive. |
| Measurement is convenient to the patient and physician. |
Fig. 2A framework for response biomarker discovery. (A) Serial collection of any biofluid during the course of treatment. Data derived from this experimental design will demonstrate treatment-related changes in biofluids, which can be correlated with response and progression. Data will also be derived that will inform on the biomarker kinetics, including how soon changes occur with response (“1”), as well as how soon changes that indicate acquisition of resistance (“2”) appear. (B) Correlation of treatment-related alterations in biofluids with treatment response. Particularly valuable biomarkers consist of analytes that change specifically with progression (“G,H,J”) or with response (”L, M, N” and possibly “T, U, V”). Iterative experiments related to numerous clinical trials will determine whether these alterations are drugs specific