| Literature DB >> 30352606 |
Shikha Saini1, Kiara Tulla2, Ajay V Maker1,2, Kenneth D Burman3, Bellur S Prabhakar4,5.
Abstract
Thyroid cancer incidence is increasing at an alarming rate, almost tripling every decade. In 2017, it was the fifth most common cancer in women. Although the majority of thyroid tumors are curable, about 2-3% of thyroid cancers are refractory to standard treatments. These undifferentiated, highly aggressive and mostly chemo-resistant tumors are phenotypically-termed anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC). ATCs are resistant to standard therapies and are extremely difficult to manage. In this review, we provide the information related to current and recently emerged first-line systemic therapy (Dabrafenib and Trametinib) along with promising therapeutics which are in clinical trials and may be incorporated into clinical practice in the future. Different categories of promising therapeutics such as Aurora kinase inhibitors, multi-kinase inhibitors, epigenetic modulators, gene therapy using oncolytic viruses, apoptosis-inducing agents, and immunotherapy are reviewed. Combination treatment options that showed synergistic and antagonistic effects are also discussed. We highlight ongoing clinical trials in ATC and discuss how personalized medicine is crucial to design the second line of treatment. Besides using conventional combination therapy, embracing a personalized approach based on advanced genomics and proteomics assessment will be crucial to developing a tailored treatment plan to improve the chances of clinical success.Entities:
Keywords: Anaplastic thyroid Cancer; Clinical trial; Immunotherapy; Inhibitors; Therapeutics; Tumor
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30352606 PMCID: PMC6198524 DOI: 10.1186/s12943-018-0903-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Fig. 1Current and promising therapeutics that can be employed for personalized medicine development: Clinically, ATC therapeutic regime involves use of more than one modality shown above (current therapies, depicted in grey color). Several promising categories of drugs were explored for their therapeutic implications and can be employed in single or combination with other drugs (depicted in green color). However, the best strategy would be to evaluate and design the personalized treatment plan by determining underlying mutations, genetic lesions, oncogenic signaling cascades and other metabolomic “Achilles heels”
Results from clinical trials conducted in advanced, metastatic, radioiodine-refractory and anaplastic thyroid cancers conducted between 2013 and 2017 in the United States (Source: https://clinicaltrials.gov/)
| No. | Drug | Phase | Cancer | Number of patients | Response Rate | Progression free survival | Overall survival | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sorafenib (Bay43–9006, Nexavar) | II | ATC | 20 | PR in 2/20 (10%); Stable disease in 5/20 (25%) | 1.9 months | – | [ |
| 2 | Carbozantinib | III | MTC | 330 | 28% | 11.2 | – | [ |
| 3 | Efatutazone+ Paclitaxel | I | ATC | 15 | PR = 1; SD = 7 | 3.3 months | – | [ |
| 4 | Pazopanib | II | Advanced and progressive medullary | 35 | 5/35 | 9.4 | 19.9 | [ |
| 5 | Fosbretabulin + Paclitaxel/Carboplatin | II | ATC | 8 | 20% | 3.3 | 5.2 months | [ |
| 6 | Vemurafenib | BRAFV600E positive, metastatic, radio-iodine refractory PTC | 26 | 10/26 | – | – | [ | |
| 7 | Axitinib | II | Advanced thyroid cancer | 52 | 35% | 16.1 | 23.2 | [ |
| 8 | Levatinib | III | Iodine refractor TC | 261 | 64.8% | 18.3 | – | [ |
| 9 | Sunitinib (second line of therapy) | II | Progressive, radio-iodine Refractory thyroid cancer | 25 | 5/20 (25%) | 6 months | 13 months | [ |
| 10 | Cabozantinib (XL-184) | III | Advanced MTC | 11.2 months | – | [ | ||
| 11 | Dabrafenib plus trametinib | II | BRAF V600E–mutated anaplastic thyroid cancer | 16 | 69% | – | – | [ |
Ongoing Clinical Trials in Anaplastic Thyroid Cancer (as on July 15, 2018), listed from https://clinicaltrials.gov/
| S. No | Phase | Drug | Drug Action | Clinical Trial No. | Status | Sponsors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | II | MLN0128 | mTOR kinase inhibitor | NCT02244463 | Recruiting | Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, USA |
| 2 | II | Lenvatinib | MKI against VEGFR1, 2, and 3 | NCT02726503 | Recruiting | Translational Research Informatics Center, Kobe, Hyogo, Japan |
| NCT02657369 | Recruiting | Eisai Inc. USA | ||||
| 3 | Early phase I | Trametinib in combination with Paclitaxel | MEK inhibitor (Trametinib) with chemotherapy | NCT03085056 | Recruiting | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, USA |
| 4 | II | Pembrolizumab | Antibody against PD-1 receptor | NCT02688608 | Recruiting | University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, USA |
| 5 | II | Inolitazone Dihydrochloride (Efutazone) and Paclitaxel | PPAR-γ agonist (Efutazone) with chemotherapy | NCT02152137 | Recruiting | Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology, USA |
| 6 | I | Combination of Durvalumab (MEDI4736) or Tremelimumab with Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy (SBRT) | Checkpoint inhibitor drugs: Durvalumab (PD-1/PDL-1 interaction blocker) and Tramelimumab (anti-CTLA4 antibody) with radiations | NCT03122496 | Recruiting | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, USA |
| 7 | II | Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy and Paclitaxel with or Without Pazopanib Hydrochloride | Pazopanib is a MKI against c-kit, FGFR, PDGFR and VEGFR | NCT01236547 | Ongoing but not yet recruiting participants | National Cancer Institute (NCI), USA |
| 8. | II | Ceritinib | ALK inhibitor | NCT02289144 | Recruiting | University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, USA |
| 9 | II | Atezolizumab Combinations with or without chemotherapy such as paclitaxel, Vemurifinib, Nab-paclitaxel, Cobimetinib and Bevacizumab | anti-PDL-1 antibody (Atezolizumab) | NCT03181100 | Recruiting | M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, USA |
| 10 | I | FAZ053 as Single Agent and in combination with PDR001 | FAZ053 is anti-PDL-1 antibody and PDR001 is monoclonal antibody against PD-1. | NCT02936102 | Recruiting | Novartis Pharmaceuticals, USA |
| 11 | II | Dabrafenib and Trametinib | Dabrafenib acts against BRAFV600E mutations and Trametinib is MEK (1 and 2) inhibitor | NCT02034110 | Recruiting | GlaxoSmithKline, USA |
| 12 | II | GW 786034 (Pazopanib Hydrochloride) | Pazopanib is a MKI against c-kit, FGFR, PDGFR and VEGFR | NCT00625846 | Active, not recruiting | National Cancer Institute (NCI), USA |
| 13 | II | Pembrolizumab, Chemotherapy,and Radiation Therapy With or Without Surgery | anti-PD1 immunotherapy | NCT03211117 | Active, not recruiting | Mayo Clinic,National Cancer Institute (NCI), USA |
| 14 | I/II | PDR001 | anti-PD1 monoclonal antibody | NCT02404441 | Recruiting | Novartis Pharmaceuticals |
Different categories of drugs used in preclinical and clinical studies in ATC
| Chemotherapeutic agents | |
|---|---|
| Topoisomerase inhibitor | Doxorubicin, Etoposide |
| Microtubule assembly | Paclitaxel, Vinorelbine, Docetaxel |
| DNA crosslinking agents | Cisplatin, Carboplatin, Cyclophosphamide, Neoplatin |
| Nucleoside Analog | Gemcitabine, 5- fluorouracil |
| Targeted inhibitors/antibodies | |
| ALK1 | GSK461364A |
| Akt | MK-2206 2HCL, Perifosine, GSK690693, GDC-0068, AT7867 |
| Aurora Kinases | MK-0457 (VX-680), SNS-314 mesylate, ZM447439, AZD1152 and MLN8054 |
| Bcl2 | Obatoclax |
| CDK | BP14 |
| EGFR | Cetuximab (C225), Manumycin A, Geldanamycin, Gefitinib (ZD1839) |
| HSP90 | Tanespimycin (17-N-allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin, NVP-A0Y922, SNX5422 |
| I-κB | Ciglitazone (upregulates TrailR1, −R2) |
| PARP | Olaparib |
| PD-1 receptor | Pembrolizumab, PDR001 |
| PDL-1 | Durvalumab, Atezolizumab, FAZ053 |
| CTLA4 | Tramelimumab |
| TGF-β | LY2157299, SB 525334, LY2109761, Perfenidone, GW788388 |
| SMO (Wnt signaling pathway) | LDE225, LY2940680, PF-5274857, SANT-1 |
| γ-secretase | RO4929097, LY-411575 |
| Anti-angiogenic agents | |
| Vascular disrupting agent | Combretastatin A4 phosphate (CA4P), Fosbretabulin |
| VEGF | Bevacizumab, AZD2171, Cediranib |
| Multi-Kinase inhibitors | |
| VEGF 1, 2 and 3, PDGFR and c-KIT | Axitinib (AG-013736), Pazopanib |
| VEGFR1, 2 and 3, EGFR and RET kinases | Vandetanib |
| VEGFR-1, PDGFR, RET, FLT-3 and CSF-1R | Sunitinib |
| VEGFR2, EGFR and RET | CLM94 |
| BCR-ABL, PDGFR and c-kit | Imatinib |
| VEGFR 1, 2, PDGFRβ, RET, BRAF and c-Kit | Sorafenib (Bay43–9006, Nexavar) |
| VEGFR-1, −2 and − 3, PDGFRβ, RET, FGFR −1, − 2, −3, −4 and c-KIT | Lenvatinib (E7080) |
| VEGFR 2, RET, MET, kit | Cabozantinib |
| VEGFR −1, − 2, −3, RET, kit, PDGFR | Motesanib |
| VEGFR − 1, −3, PDGFR, FGFR1–3 | Ninetedanib |
| RET, PDGFR, FGFR, FLT3, kit | Ponatinib |
| MET, ALK, ROS1 | Crizotinib |
| Epigenetic modifiers | |
| HDAC inhibitors | Valproic acid, Thailandepsin A (TDP-A), Trichostatin A (TSA), Suberoyl Amide Hydroxamic Acid (SAHA), N-hydroxy-7-(2-naphthylthio)heptanomide (HNHA) |
| BET inhibitors | JQ1, I-BET762 |
| Miscellaneous | |
| HDACs, EGFR (dual inhibitor) | CUDC-101 |
| Proteosome inhibitors | Carfilzomib, Bortezomib (PS-341) |
| PPARγ agonists | Rosiglitazone, RS5444, Pioglitazone, Troglitazone |
Fig. 2Different promising drugs/inhibitors that target several hallmarks of ATC including uncontrolled proliferation, resistance to apoptosis, immunosuppression, Epigenetic reprogramming, angiogenesis and metabolomic alterations