| Literature DB >> 28673313 |
Veronica Tisato1, Rebecca Voltan2, Arianna Gonelli2, Paola Secchiero2, Giorgio Zauli2.
Abstract
The two murine double minute (MDM) family members MDM2 and MDMX are at the center of an intense clinical assessment as molecular target for the management of cancer. Indeed, the two proteins act as regulators of P53, a well-known key controller of the cell cycle regulation and cell proliferation that, when altered, plays a direct role on cancer development and progression. Several evidence demonstrated that functional aberrations of P53 in tumors are in most cases the consequence of alterations on the MDM2 and MDMX regulatory proteins, in particular in patients with hematological malignancies where TP53 shows a relatively low frequency of mutation while MDM2 and MDMX are frequently found amplified/overexpressed. The pharmacological targeting of these two P53-regulators in order to restore or increase P53 expression and activity represents therefore a strategy for cancer therapy. From the discovery of the Nutlins in 2004, several compounds have been developed and reported with the ability of targeting the P53-MDM2/X axis by inhibiting MDM2 and/or MDMX. From natural compounds up to small molecules and stapled peptides, these MDM2/X pharmacological inhibitors have been extensively studied, revealing different biological features and different rate of efficacy when tested in in vitro and in vivo experimental tumor models. The data/evidence coming from the preclinical experimentation have allowed the identification of the most promising molecules and the setting of clinical studies for their evaluation as monotherapy or in therapeutic combination with conventional chemotherapy or with innovative therapeutic protocols in different tumor settings. Preliminary results have been recently published reporting data about safety, tolerability, potential side effects, and efficacy of such therapeutic approaches. In this light, the aim of this review is to give an updated overview about the state of the art of the clinical evaluation of MDM2/X inhibitor compounds with a special attention to hematological malignancies and to the potential for the management of pediatric cancers.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical studies; Leukemia; MDM2; MDMX; Pediatric tumors; Pharmacological inhibitor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28673313 PMCID: PMC5496368 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-017-0500-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1Expression levels of MDM2 and MDMX in human cancers. Graphical representation of the expression levels of MDM2 (upper panel) and MDMX (lower panel) in human cancers obtained from studies collected in cBioPortal For Cancer Genomics (www.cbioportal.org). The picture shows RNA values of patients expressing the wild-type or mutated genes. TCGA The Cancer Genome Atlas Network
Frequency of alterations of TP53, MDM2, and MDMX in relevant hematological neoplasia diseases
| Disease |
|
|
|
| References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALL | 13.5 ± 0.7 (459 pt) | 4.3 ± 1.2 (1731 pt) | 29.3 ± 4.7 (101 pt) | 80 (55 pt) | [ |
| AML | 13.5 ± 2.7 (2934 pt) | 1.5 ± 0.7 (2398 pt) | 49 (189 pt) | 10.7 (140 pt) | [ |
| BL | 17.3 ± 9 (218 pt) | 10 (28 pt) | 13.5 ± 13.4 (109 pt) | 21 (30 pt) | [ |
| CLL | 10.2 ± 1.5 (3703 pt) | 6.8 ± 1.9 (3523 pt) | 13.8 ± 1.8 (3523 pt) | 21 (131 pt) | [ |
| MM | 8.2 ± 5.2 (733 pt) | 10.2 ± 2.7 (954 pt) | 8 (82 pt) | na | [ |
| NHL | 24.4 ± 6.4 (1337 pt) | 25 ± 7.1 (75 pt) | 15.1 ± 17.2 (851 pt) | na | [ |
| WM/LPL | 7 (30 pt) | 8.7 ± 1 (206 pt) | 4 ± 1.4 (214 pt) | na | [ |
The percentages of abnormalities were calculated after compiling cases reported in literature (total number of patients is indicated in bracket) and are reported as mean ± standard deviation
ALL acute lymphoblastic leukemia, AML acute myeloid leukemia, BL Burkitt lymphoma, CLL chronic lymphocytic leukemia, MM multiple myeloma, NHL non-Hodgkin lymphoma, WM/LPL Waldenström macroglobulinemia/lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma, na not available
Fig. 2Schematic representation of the autoregulatory loop between P53, MDM2, and MDMX and pharmacological inhibitors. The picture shows the main molecular links between P53, MDM2, and MDMX together with the MDM2 and MDMX inhibitors under clinical evaluation and the key compounds used in clinical studies for combination therapy
Clinical trials with MDM2-MDMX inhibitors
| Compound | Clinical study | Phase | Status | Clinical trial identifier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RG7112 RO5045337 | Extension study to provide treatment to participants who have completed parent studies | 1 | Active, not recruiting | NCT01677780 |
| Solid tumors | 1 | Completed | NCT01164033 | |
| Patients with liposarcoma who are eligible for debulking surgery | 1 | Completed | NCT01143740 | |
| Soft tissue sarcoma: treatment in combination with doxorubicin | 1 | Completed | NCT01605526 | |
| AML, ALL, CML in blast phase, refractory CLL/SCLL | 1 | Completed | NCT00623870 | |
| Advanced solid tumors including lymphoma | 1 | Completed | NCT00559533 | |
| AML: treatment combination with cytarabine | 1 | Completed | NCT01635296 | |
| RG7388 RO5503781 | Essential thrombocythemia and polycythemia vera | 1 | Recruiting | NCT02407080 |
| Solid tumors: determination of excretion balance, pharmacokinetics, metabolism and bioavailability | 1 | Active, not recruiting | NCT02828930 | |
| Multiple myeloma: combinations with ixazomib citrate and dexamethasone | 1/2 | Recruiting | NCT02633059 | |
| R/R AML: combination with cytarabine | 3 | Recruiting | NCT02545283 | |
| In R/R FL in combination with obinutuzumab and in DLBCL combination with rituximab | 1b/2 | Recruiting | NCT02624986 | |
| R/R AML patients not eligible for cytotoxic therapy: combination with venetoclax | 1/2 | Recruiting | NCT02670044 | |
| Prostate cancer who haven’t had docetaxel: Idasanutlin with abiraterone or enzalutamide | 1/2 | Open | CRUKE/12/032 | |
| Solid tumors: effect of posaconazole on pharmacokinetics, bioavailability of new formulations | 1 | Completed | NCT01901172 | |
| AML: combination with cytarabine | 1 | Completed | NCT01773408 | |
| Advanced malignancies except leukemia | 1 | Completed | NCT01462175 | |
| SAR405838 MI-77301 | Advanced cancer | 1 | Active not recruiting | NCT01636479 |
| Advanced cancer (solid tumors): combination with pimasertib | 1 | Completed | NCT01985191 | |
| MK-8242 SCH 900242 | Advanced solid tumors: study of safety and pharmacokinetics | 1 | Completed | NCT01463696 |
| AML: alone and in combination with cytarabine | 1 | Completed | NCT01451437 | |
| AMG232 | R/R AML: combination with trametinib | 1b | Recruiting | NCT02016729 |
| R/R multiple myeloma: combination with carfilzomib, lenalidomide, dexamethasone | 1 | Not yet recruiting | NCT03031730 | |
| Advanced solid tumors or multiple myeloma | 1 | Active not recruiting | NCT01723020 | |
| Metastatic cutaneous melanoma: combination with trametinib and dabrafenib or trametinib | 1b/2a | Recruiting | NCT02110355 | |
| DS-3032b | Relapsed and/or refractory multiple myeloma | 1 | Recruiting | NCT02579824 |
| Hematological malignancies: AML, ALL, CML and myelodysplastic syndrome | 1 | Recruiting | NCT02319369 | |
| Advanced solid tumors or lymphomas | 1 | Recruiting | NCT01877382 | |
| HDM201 | Liposarcoma in combination with LEE011 | 1b/2 | Recruiting | NCT02343172 |
| Advanced solid and hematological tumors with wt-TP53 | 1 | Recruiting | NCT02143635 | |
| Neuroblastoma: to match genomic aberrations at time of relapse to designed combined therapies | 1 | Recruiting | NCT02780128 | |
| CGM097 | Advanced solid tumors with wt-TP53 | 1 | Active not recruiting | NCT01760525 |
| ALRN-6924 | AML or advanced myelodysplastic syndrome with wt-TP53: alone or in combination with cytarabine | 1/1b | Recruiting | NCT02909972 |
| Advanced solid tumors or lymphomas with wt-TP53 | 1/2a | Recruiting | NCT02264613 |
Data from ClinicalTrials.gov. National Library of Medicine: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov and Cancer Research UK: http://www.cancerresearchuk.org. Accessed April 2017
R/R relapsed/refractory, FL follicular lymphoma, DLBCL diffuse large B cell lymphoma