| Literature DB >> 28641310 |
K J Gash1,2, A C Chambers1,2, D E Cotton2, A C Williams1, M G Thomas1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Complete tumour response (pCR) to neo-adjuvant chemo-radiotherapy for rectal cancer is associated with a reduction in local recurrence and improved disease-free and overall survival, but is achieved in only 20-30% of patients. Drug repurposing for anti-cancer treatments is gaining momentum, but the potential of such drugs as adjuncts, to increase tumour response to chemo-radiotherapy in rectal cancer, is only just beginning to be recognised.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28641310 PMCID: PMC5520519 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2017.175
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Risk factors associated with local recurrence following rectal cancer surgery as predicted following staging using MRI pelvis, adapted from NICE guidelines 2014
| cT1-3a No lymph node involvement | cT3b or greater Surgical margin not threatened Any suspicious lymph node NOT threatening surgical margin Extramural vascular invasion | Threatened (<1 mm) or breached resection margin Low tumours enchroaching inter-sphincteric plane or levator involvement |
Abbreviation: MRI=magnetic resonance imaging.
The risk of local recurrence helps to determine the use of neo-adjuvant therapy in rectal cancer.
The American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) criteria for determining pathological response to neo-adjuvant radiotherapy in patients with rectal cancer, as determined by histological analysis after tumour resection, (Mace )
| No viable tumour cells remaining | Single or small groups of tumour cells | Residual cancer outgrown by fibrosis | Minimal or no treatment effect |
Pathological complete response (pCR) equates to a score of 0.
Figure 1A PRISMA flow diagram showing the inclusion and exclusion of relevant studies. Due to the small number of studies yielded by the search criteria, the heterogeneity of outcomes and the diversity of adjuncts assessed, meta-analysis was not possible.
Figure 2The mechanism of action of statins on the mevalonate pathway. Statins are competitive inhibitors of the enzyme 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl-coenzyme A reductase (HMG CoA reductase). This is a critical enzyme in the production of mevalonate and inhibition consequently reduces its derivatives, cholesterol, steroids and isoprenoids. Importantly in cancer, inhibition of this pathway reduces specific prenylated proteins, such as RAS.
Figure 3The cyclo-oxygenase dependent mechanism of action of aspirin. Aspirin treatment causes the post-translational modification of cyclo-oxygenase (Cox) proteins by acetylating serine residues (Cox-1Ser530 and Cox-2Ser516) on either Cox-1 & Cox-2 enzymes. This prevents arachidonic acid from accessing the catalytic site on the Cox enzymes. As a result there is reduced formation of the precursor for all prostaglandins (PGs) and therefore lower levels of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2).
Figure 4The mechanism of action of metformin. Metformin has both AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) dependent and independent mechanisms of action. Although, both these mechanisms can converge by inhibiting ‘mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1’ (mTORC1). AMPK is activated by metformin, resulting in downregulation mTORC1 and subsequent inhibition of tumour progression. Furthermore, metformin inhibits both the ragulator complex and ‘regulated in development and DNA damage response 1’ (REDD1) which subsequently results in inhibition of mTORC1.
Dworak’s tumour regression grade
| No regression | Dominant tumour mass with obvious fibrosis and/or vasculopathy | Dominantly fibrotic changes with few tumour cells or groups (easy to find) | Very few (difficult to find microscopically) tumour cells in fibrotic tissue with or without mucous substance | No tumour cells, only fibrotic mass (total regression or response) |
Grading of regression was determined histologically. Tumours were graded according to the difficulty or ease by which a pathologist was able to find tumour cells within the resected specimen. (Dworak ).