| Literature DB >> 29100459 |
Merope Griffin1, Daniele Scotto1, Debra H Josephs1,2, Silvia Mele1, Silvia Crescioli1, Heather J Bax1,2, Giulia Pellizzari1,2, Matthew D Wynne1, Mano Nakamura1, Ricarda M Hoffmann1, Kristina M Ilieva1,3, Anthony Cheung1,3, James F Spicer2, Sophie Papa2, Katie E Lacy1, Sophia N Karagiannis1,3.
Abstract
Identification of mutations in the gene encoding the serine/threonine-protein kinase, BRAF, and constitutive activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway in around 50% of malignant melanomas have led to the development and regulatory approval of targeted pathway inhibitor drugs. A proportion of patients are intrinsically resistant to BRAF inhibitors, and most patients who initially respond, acquire resistance within months. In this review, we discuss pathway inhibitors and their mechanisms of resistance, and we focus on numerous efforts to improve clinical benefits through combining agents with disparate modes of action, including combinations with checkpoint inhibitor antibodies. We discuss the merits of combination strategies based on enhancing immune responses or overcoming tumor-associated immune escape mechanisms. Emerging insights into mechanisms of action, resistance pathways and their impact on host-tumor relationships will inform the design of optimal combinations therapies to improve outcomes for patients who currently do not benefit from recent treatment breakthroughs.Entities:
Keywords: BRAF; CTLA-4; MAPK; immunotherapy; melanoma
Year: 2017 PMID: 29100459 PMCID: PMC5652848 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.19836
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
U.S. FDA-approved agents and combinations for the treatment of malignant melanoma
| Agent/Combination (brand names) | Year of first regulatory approval | Specificity | Class | Mechanisms of action | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dacarbazine(DTIC-Dome®) | 1975 | Non-specific | Alkylating agent | Interferes with cancer cells leading to DNA damage, cell cycle arrest and tumor cell apoptosis | Stage IV melanoma |
| IFNα2b(INTRON® A) | 1995 | IFNα Receptor 1 and 2 | Cytokine | Multifunctioning immunoactivatory cytokine enhances anti-tumoral immune response, anti-angiogenic, anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic properties | Adjuvant setting after surgery to Stage III patients free of disease, at high risk recurrence, orStage IIB or Stage IIC patients with lesions of > 4 mm Breslow thickness) |
| High dose IL-2 (Aldesleukin, Proleukin®) | 1998 | IL-2 receptor expressed on lymphocytes | Cytokine | Immune activating, increases activation and proliferation of immune cells (e.g. T, NK, B cells) | Advanced metastatic melanoma |
| Pegylated IFNα2b (Sylatron®) | 2011 | IFNα receptor 1 and 2 | Cytokine | Modified (pegylated) form of IFNα2b with increased half-life and enhanced therapeutic efficacy | Microscopic or macroscopic nodal melanoma following surgical resection, including therapeutic lymph node dissection |
| Ipilimumab (Yervoy®) | 2011 | CTLA-4 expressed on T cells | Humanized monoclonal antibody (mAb) | Inhibition of checkpoint receptor CTLA-4 preventing engagement with CD80/CD86, activates immune system enhancing T cell activation and targeting CTLA-4-expressing Tregs | Stage III or Stage IV melanoma |
| Pembrolizumab (KEYTRUDA®) | 2014 | PD1 expressed on T cells | Humanized monoclonal antibody (mAb) | Inhibition of checkpoint receptor PD-1, prevents interaction between PD-1 and its ligands PD-L1 and PD-L2, releasing PD-1 pathway-mediated inhibition, prevents T cell anergy or deletion, activates immune system enhancing T cell activation | Unresectable Stage III melanoma or Stage IV melanoma |
| Nivolumab (OPDIVO®) | 2014 | PD1 expressed on T cells | Humanizedmonoclonal antibody (mAb) | Targets the inhibitory receptor PD-1 prevents interaction between PD-1 and its ligands PD-L1 and PD-L2, releasing PD-1 pathway-mediated inhibition, prevents T cell anergy or deletion, activates immune system enhancing T cell activation | Unresectable Stage III melanoma or Stage IV melanoma |
| Talimogene laharparepvec (IMLYGIC® or T-Vec) | 2015 | Modified oncolytic herpes virus | Targeted Oncolytic virus immunotherapy | Virus construct designed to replicate within cancer cells and produce granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) causing cell lysis and death, and releasing tumor-associated antigens. Alongside GM-CSF, this may promote an anti-tumor immune response | Local treatment of unresectable cutaneous, subcutaneous, and nodal lesions in patients with recurrent melanoma after surgery |
| Ipilimumab (Yervoy®)&Nivolumab (OPDIVO®) | 2015 | CTLA-4 expressed on T cells & PD1 expressed on T cells | Immune checkpoint inhibitors that target separate, distinct checkpoint pathways. Inhibition of these immune checkpoint pathways results in enhanced T cell function greater than the effects of either antibody alone | Unresectable Stage III melanoma or Stage IV melanoma | |
| Verumafenib (Zelboraf®) | 2011 | BRAF V600E, mutated form of BRAF protein | Small molecule kinase inhibitor | Blocks activity of the V600E-mutated form of BRAF, and thus the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway, reducing proliferation of melanoma cells carrying the mutation | Unresectable Stage III melanoma or Stage IV melanoma that carry theBRAF V600E mutation |
| Dabrafenib(Tafinlar*) | 2013 | BRAF V600E mutated form of BRAF protein | Small molecule kinase inhibitor | Blocks mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway reducing proliferation of melanoma cells carrying mutation | Unresectable Stage III melanoma or Stage IV melanoma that carry theBRAF V600E mutation |
| Trametinib (Mekinist*) | 2013 | Mitogen-activated extracellular signal regulated kinase 1 (MEK1) and MEK2 | Small molecule kinase inhibitor | Selective, allosteric inhibitor of mitogen-activated extracellular signal regulated kinase 1 (MEK1) and MEK2 activation and kinase activity. This extracellular signal related kinase (ERK) pathway is often activated by mutated forms of BRAF in melanoma and other cancers. Blocks mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway reducing proliferation of melanoma cells carrying mutation. | Unresectable Stage III melanoma or Stage IV melanoma that carry theBRAF V600E mutation |
| Dabrafenib(Tafinlar*)&Trametinib (Mekinist*) | 2014 | BRAF V600E mutated form of BRAF protein&Mitogen-activated extracellular signal regulated kinase 1 (MEK1) and MEK2 | Small molecule kinase inhibitors | Simultaneous inhibition of mutant BRAF (dabrafenib) and MEK kinases (trametinib) | Unresectable Stage III melanoma or Stage IV melanoma that carry theBRAF V600E mutation |
| Verumafenib (Zelboraf®)&Cobimetinib (COTELLIC) | 2015 | BRAF V600E mutated form of BRAF protein&Mitogen-activated extracellular signal regulated kinase 1 (MEK1) and MEK2 | Small molecule kinase inhibitors | Simultaneous inhibition of mutant BRAF (dabrafenib) and MEK kinases (cobimetinib) | Unresectable Stage III melanoma or Stage IV melanoma that carry theBRAF V600E mutation |
mAb: monoclonal antibody; IFN: interferon; IL: interleukin.
Figure 1Influence of pathway resistance mechanisms on BRAF/MEK inhibitor monotherapies and combinations with immunotherapies
(A) MAPK signaling inhibition may either result in the survival of tumor cells with activated pathways such as the PI3K/AKT, or exert strong selective pressure on melanoma tumors to acquire gain-of-function mutations, methylation or high copy number loss of tumor suppressor genes such as PTEN. These can lead to increased activity of alternative pathways (e.g. PI3K/AKT), which could confer survival advantages for BRAF/MEK inhibitor-resistant melanomas. (B) The success of combinations of BRAF/MEK inhibitors with immunotherapies may also depend on activation of alternative pathways to MAPK. MAPK pathway inhibitors may potentiate an anti-tumor immune response by destroying cancer cells and the tumor microenvironment, reducing tumor-associated immunosuppressive effects, enhancing IFNγ production, T cell proliferation and MHC expression, all of which could result in tumor antigen presentation and more effective anti-tumor immune responses. All or some of these could then be further enhanced with T cell activation and Treg destruction, engendered by immune checkpoint inhibition combination or subsequent treatment (top). However, in tumors with mutations on pathway genes, including those with loss of PTEN, that support alternative activation of pathways such as the PI3K/AKT, both BRAF/MEK and checkpoint blockade inhibition as monotherapies or combinations would suffer from resistance. This may be due to impaired T cell infiltration into tumors, reduced T cell activation and expansion and loss of immuno-activatory signals (e.g. reduced IFNγ, granzyme B release). These may point to shared mechanisms of resistance for BRAF inhibitors and immunotherapies and could partly explain non-responders to combinatory or sequential BRAF/MEK inhibitor and immunotherapy treatments.
Proposed causes of intrinsic and acquired resistance to BRAF inhibitors
| Gene mutation/cause of resistance | Proposed mechanisms of resistance |
|---|---|
| Loss of PTEN | PTEN is a crucial suppressor of the PI3K/AKT pathway. Loss of PTEN leads to constitutive activation of the pathway and allows cell proliferation to continue even in the presence of BRAF inhibition. |
| RAC1P29S | RAC1P29S mutation sustains MAPK signaling even in the presence of BRAF inhibitors, so cell proliferation can continue despite inhibition. |
| Overexpression of MAP3K8 | MAP3K8 encodes the COT protein. COT can independently activate the MAPK/ERK pathway, and so increased levels of COT mean cellular proliferation continues despite BRAF inhibition. |
| Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) secretion by stromal cells | Secretion of HGF by stromal cells leads to activation of MET, a receptor for HGF, reactivate the MAPK/ERK and PI3K/AKT pathways, leading to BRAF inhibitor resistance. |
| Loss of NF1 tumor suppressor gene | NF1 is a negative regulator of RAS signaling. Loss of NF1 by mutation allows RAS increase, subsequent CRAF activation, leading to activation of the MAPK pathway, even in the presence of BRAF inhibition. |
| Amplification of CCND1 | CCND1 encodes Cyclin D1, a key cell cycle regulator, which can help bypass proliferation inhibition by BRAF inhibitors. |
| Relief of ERK negative feedback | BRAF inhibitor arrest tumor growth by inhibiting the ERK pathway. This relieves ERK negative feedback on RAS, partially restoring RAS activity leading to RAS-induced BRAFV600Edimers. BRAF inhibitors bind one and transactivate the other BRAF, reducing BRAF inhibitor therapy. |
| RAS-activating mutations | Mutated RAS-GTP becomes constitutively active, enhances BRAFV600Edimerisation, reactivates the ERK pathway and confers resistance to BRAF inhibitors which only block monomeric BRAFV600E. |
| BRAFV600Ealternative splicing | A BRAFV600E splice variant p61BRAFV600E due to mutations or epigenetic changes could form dimers in a RAS-independent manner, making the BRAF inhibitor ineffective as it blocks monomeric BRAFV600E. |
| BRAFV600Eoverexpression | Increased BRAFV600E levels due to gene copy number gain may also promote spontaneous BRAFV600Edimerization, reactivating the ERK pathway and causing treatment failure in some patients. |
| Alternative RAF isoforms | BRAFV600E melanoma treated with BRAF inhibitors may acquire resistance through flexible switching between different RAF isoforms capable of reactivating the ERK pathway, upregulating ARAF or CRAF. |
| COT overexpression | COT, possibly due to gene amplification or yet unidentified mechanisms, can reactivate MEK in the presence of BRAF inhibition, stimulating ERK signaling and driving resistance. |
| MEK-activating mutations | Activating mutations in MEK1/ MEK2 render BRAF blockage ineffective, as MEK reactivation means the MAPK/ERK pathway can still proceed downstream of BRAF regardless of its inhibition. |
| Adaptive PI3K/AKT signaling | Abnormal PI3K/AKT signaling is a common feature of melanomas. Blockage of ERK signaling may lead to adaptive PI3K/AKT hyperactivity that compensates for BRAF inhibition and drives resistance. |
| Upregulation of RTKs | The PI3K/AKT-pathway is activated by growth factors that bind to RTKs, such as PDGFR-β and IGF-1R. With BRAF blockade, tumor cells may upregulate these leading to persistent PI3K/AKT signaling. |
| PI3K/AKT-activating mutations | PI3K and AKT-activating mutations enhance AKT-signaling, which increases anti-apoptotic signals and upregulates expression of key proliferative genes, allowing survival signals independently of BRAF. |
| Enhanced EGFR signaling | Upregulation/activation of EGFR driven by suppression of SOX10 and enhanced TGF-β signaling, conferring oncogene-induced senescence, reversed with BRAF/MEK inhibition. |
Current phase III trials of combination therapies in melanoma. Information sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov
| NCT01584648 | BRAF inhibitor + MEK inhibitor | Comparing dabrafenib + trametinibvs.Dabrafenib monotherapy | Stage IIIC (unresectable) or Stage IV BRAF V600E/K-mutant melanomaFirst line treatment | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT01682083 | BRAF inhibitor + MEK inhibitor | Dabrafenib + trametinib vs.placebo | Adjuvant treatment of high risk V600E/K mutation-positive melanoma after surgical resection | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT01909453 | BRAF inhibitor + MEK inhibitor vs. BRAF inhibitor alone | LGX818 + MEK162vs.vemurafenib monotherapyorLGX818 monotherapy | Locally advanced, unresectable or metastatic BRAF V600E/K-mutant melanomaFirst line treatment or second line in patients who have progressed on or after first line immunotherapy | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT01597908 | BRAF inhibitor + MEK inhibitor vs. BRAF inhibitor alone | Dabrafenib + trametenibvs.vemurafenib monotherapy | Stage IIIC (unresectable) or Stage IV BRAF V600E/K-mutant melanomaFirst line treatment | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT01689519 | BRAF inhibitor + MEK inhibitor vs. BRAF inhibitor alone | vemurafenib + cobimetinibvs.vemurafenib monotherapy | Stage IIIC (unresectable) or Stage IV BRAF V600E/K-mutant melanomaFirst line treatment | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT02908672 | Anti-PDL1 antibody + MEK inhibitor + BRAF inhibitor vs. placebo + MEK inhibitor + BRAF inhibitor | Atezolizumab + cobimetinib + vemurafenibvs.placebo + cobimetinib + vemurafenib | Stage IIIC (unresectable) or Stage IV BRAF V600E/K-mutant melanomaFirst line treatment | Recruiting |
| NCT02967692 | Anti-PD-1 antibody + BRAF inhibitor + MEK inhibitor vs. placebo + BRAF inhibitor + MEK inhibitor | PDR001 + dabrafenib + trametinibvs.placebo + dabrafenib + trametinib | Stage IIIC (unresectable) or Stage IV BRAF V600E/K-mutant melanomaFirst line treatment | Recruiting |