| Literature DB >> 30396902 |
James Rw Conway1, David Herrmann1,2, Tr Jeffry Evans3,4, Jennifer P Morton3,4, Paul Timpson1,2.
Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is among the most deadly solid tumours. This is due to a generally late-stage diagnosis of a primarily treatment-refractory disease. Several large-scale sequencing and mass spectrometry approaches have identified key drivers of this disease and in doing so highlighted the vast heterogeneity of lower frequency mutations that make clinical trials of targeted agents in unselected patients increasingly futile. There is a clear need for improved biomarkers to guide effective targeted therapies, with biomarker-driven clinical trials for personalised medicine becoming increasingly common in several cancers. Interestingly, many of the aberrant signalling pathways in PDAC rely on downstream signal transduction through the mitogen-activated protein kinase and phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) pathways, which has led to the development of several approaches to target these key regulators, primarily as combination therapies. The following review discusses the trend of PDAC therapy towards molecular subtyping for biomarker-driven personalised therapies, highlighting the key pathways under investigation and their relationship to the PI3K pathway. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: cell biology; clinical trials; pancreatic cancer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30396902 PMCID: PMC6580874 DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2018-316822
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut ISSN: 0017-5749 Impact factor: 23.059
Figure 1Schematic representation of PDAC progression from the primary tumour to a locally invasive disease and eventually metastasis. (1) Pancreatic cancer cells proliferate in the primary tumour, metabolising nutrients delivered by the blood vasculature and surrounding stroma. (2) Cancer cells invade through the extracellular matrix (ECM), including cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and tumour-associated macrophages (TAMs), among other cancer-associated cell types, eventually intravasating or invading into the lymph and travelling to distant sites. (3) Circulating tumour cells (CTCs) must develop resistance to anoikis, as well as shear stress, in order to survive in the circulation with red blood cells (RBCs) and leucocytes. (4) After travelling through the circulation, CTCs extravasate at secondary sites, commonly the liver, establishing a new niche. ECM, extracellular matrix; PDAC, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.
Figure 2Adaptable drug development pipeline, demonstrating the progression of lead compounds through target validation, lead compound identification and optimisation, then preclinical validation. The necessary addition to this process is the identification of biomarkers to guide both lead compound development and later stratification in phase II/III clinical trials. These processes may be iterated to improve on-target efficacy, solubility and biomarkers. After safety and tolerability is confirmed in phase I clinical trials, biomarker-driven phase II/III may reduce the high attrition rates of lead compounds if appropriate patient stratification can demonstrate beneficial response in the assessed subsets of patients. These biomarkers may also provide opportunities for retrospective analysis and later iteration into clinical trials. PI3K, phosphoinositide 3-kinase.
Molecular subtyping of patients with pancreatic cancer
| Collisson | Moffit | Bailey | |
| Approach | Microarray | Microarray | Expression analysis (RNAseq and microarray) |
| Cohort | 63 primary resected PDAC | 145 primary resected and 61 metastatic PDAC tumours | 96 RNAseq and |
| Tumour/stromal contribution | Microdissection | Multivariate analysis (virtual microdissection) | Macrodissection |
| Tumour subtypes | Classical | Classical | Pancreatic progenitor |
| Immunogenic | |||
| Exocrine-like | ADEX | ||
| QM | Basal like | Squamous | |
| Stromal subtypes | Not assessed | Activated | ESTIMATE |
| Normal |
This pancreatic cancer subtype table is adapted from refs 40–42.
ADEX, Aberrantly Differentiated Endocrine eXocrine; ESTIMATE, Estimation of STromal and Immune cells in MAlignant Tumor tissues using Expression data; PDAC, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma; QM, quasimesenchymal.
List of PI3K pathway inhibitors currently undergoing clinical development for pancreatic cancer
| Target | Inhibitor | Phase | Status | Patients | Combination | NIH number | Reference(s) |
| Akt inhibitors | |||||||
| Pan-Akt | MK2206 | I | Completed | AdvST/MST | Monotherapy | NCT00670488 |
|
| I | Completed | AdvST/MST | Selumitinib (MEKi) | NCT01021748 | |||
| I | Completed | PDAC (PTEN loss) | Monotherapy | NCT00848718 |
| ||
| I | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | Dinaciclib (CDKi) | NCT01783171 | |||
| II | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | Selumitinib (MEKi) | NCT01658943 |
| ||
| Afuresertib (GSK2110183) | I | Completed | AdvST | Trametinib (MEKi) | NCT01476137 |
| |
| II | Ongoing | AdvST | NCT01531894 | ||||
| Uprosertib (GSK2141795) | I | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | Trametinib (MEKi) | NCT01138085 | ||
| I | Completed | AdvST | NCT00920257 | ||||
| Oleandrin (PBI-05204) | I | Completed | AdvST | NCT00554268 |
| ||
| II | Ongoing | Metastatic pancreatic cancer | NCT02329717 | ||||
| Perifosine | II | Completed | Locally advanced or metastatic pancreatic cancer | NCT00053924 | |||
| II | Completed | Locally advanced or metastatic pancreatic cancer | NCT00059982 |
| |||
| RX-0201 | II | Completed | Metastatic pancreatic cancer | Gemcitabine | NCT01028495 | ||
| Rapalogs | |||||||
| mTORC1 (FKBP12) | Sirolimus (rapamycin) | I | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | Sunitinib (RTKi) | NCT00583063 |
|
| I | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | Sorafenib (RTKi) | NCT00449280 |
| ||
| II | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | NCT00499486 | ||||
| II | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | NCT00276744 | ||||
| I/II | Ongoing | PDAC | Metformin | NCT02048384 | |||
| I | Ongoing | Pancreatic cancer | Vismodegib (SMOi) | NCT01537107 | |||
| Temsirolimus | I | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | Lenalidomide | NCT01183663 | ||
| I | Terminated | PDAC | Gemcitabine | NCT00593008 | |||
| I/II | Ongoing | Pancreatic cancer | Nivolumab (PD-1i) | NCT02423954 | |||
| II | Completed | Locally advanced or metastatic pancreatic cancer | NCT00075647 |
| |||
| Everolimus (RAD001) | I | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | Sorafenib (RTKi) | NCT00981162 | ||
| I | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | Trametinib (MEKi) | NCT00955773 |
| ||
| I/II | Completed | PDAC | Gemcitabine | NCT00560963 | |||
| I/II | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | Cetuximab (EGFRi) and capecitabine | NCT01077986 |
| ||
| II | Terminated | Pancreatic cancer | Erlotinib (EGFRi) | NCT00640978 |
| ||
| II | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | NCT00409292 |
| |||
| I/II | Recruiting | PDAC | Ribociclib (CDKi) | NCT02985125 | |||
| Ridafirolimus | I | Completed | AdvST | Bevacizumab (VEGFRi) | NCT00781846 |
| |
| PI3K inhibitors | |||||||
| PI3K isoform p110α | Alpelisib (BYL719) | I | Ongoing | Pancreatic cancer | Gemcitabine and abraxane | NCT02155088 | |
| Pan-PI3K | Buparlisib (BKM120) | I | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | mFOLFOX6 | NCT01571024 |
|
| I | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | LDE225 (SMOi) | NCT01576666 | |||
| I | Completed | Pancreatic cancer | Trametinib (MEKi) | NCT01155453 |
| ||
| I | Ongoing | AdvST | MEK163 (MEKi) | NCT01363232 | |||
| PX-866 | I | Completed | AdvST | Docetaxel | NCT01204099 |
| |
| ZSTK474 | I | Completed | AdvST | NCT01280487 | |||
| Copanlisib | I | Completed | AdvST | NCT00962611 |
| ||
| Dual PI3K pathway inhibitors | |||||||
| mTORC1/2 | Vistusertib (AZD2014) | I | Completed | AdvST | NCT01026402 |
| |
| II | Recruiting | AdvST (RICTOR amplified) | NCT03166904 | ||||
| II | Recruiting | AdvST: | NCT02583542 | ||||
| II | Recruiting | AdvST (TSC1/2 loss or mutation) | NCT03166176 | ||||
| II | Recruiting | AdvST: | NCT02576444 | ||||
| p70-S6K and Akt | LY2780301 | I | Complete | AdvST | NCT01115751 |
| |
| PI3K and mTOR | Dactolisib | I | Completed | AdvST | MEK162 (MEKi) | NCT01337765 | |
| NVP | I | Completed | AdvST | NCT00600275 |
| ||
| Voxtalisib (SAR245409, | I | Completed | AdvST | NCT00485719 |
| ||
| SF1126 | I | Completed | AdvST | NCT00907205 |
| ||
| Gedatolisib (PF-05212384, PKI-587) | I | Terminated | AdvST | Irinotecan | NCT01347866 |
| |
| I | Completed | AdvST | NCT00940498 |
| |||
| I | Recruiting | AdvST | Palbociclib (CDKi) | NCT03065062 | |||
AdvST, advanced solid tumours (including pancreatic cancer); CDKi, cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; EGFRi, EGFR inhibitor; MEKi, MAPK/ERK kinase inhibitor inhibitor; mFOLFOX6, modified FOLFOX (ie, 5-fluorouracil and oxaliplatin); MST, metastatic solid tumours (including pancreatic cancer); mTOR, mechanistic target of rapamycin; NIH, National Institutes of Health; PARP, poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase; PARPi, PARP inhibitors; PDAC, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma; PD-1, programmed death-1; PD-1i, PD-1 inhibitor; PI3K, phosphoinositide 3-kinase; RTKi, receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor; SMOi, smoothened inhibitor; VEGFRi, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor inhibitor.
Figure 3Simplified schematic of the PI3K pathway, which highlights the common targets for small molecule inhibitors. Briefly, signalling from growth factors activates RTKs and recruits PI3K and other scaffold proteins to the cell membrane, where PIP2 is converted to PIP3. This recruits phosphoinositide-dependent kinase-1 (PDK1) and Akt to the membrane and leads to downstream signalling through the kinase activities of Akt. (1) Single-strand break repair is regulated primarily by PARP and inhibition of PARP can lead to genomic instability. (2) Double-stranded break repair is primarily regulated by a complex with BRCA2, which is lost in familial pancreatic cancer and some PDAC cases and can lead to genomic instability. Genomically unstable tumours require the PI3K pathway to maintain survival pathways and PI3K pathway inhibition may be an emerging option for patients with BRCA2 mutations or in combination with PARP inhibitors. More exhaustive pathway maps can be found in refs 61 80. P13K, phosphoinositide 3-kinase; RTKs, receptor tyrosine kinases.
Figure 4Schematic of the formation of a hypoxic environment and the potential targeting of this microenvironment with HAPs. RBCs transport oxygen through the blood vasculature, and hypoxia forms when this diffusion-limited process delivers insufficient oxygen to cells distant to the vasculature (blue cells). The extreme case of anoxia (grey cells) regularly results in necrotic cell death. HAPs take advantage of the hypoxic environment of tumours to deliver cytotoxic compounds to these tumour regions, where the prodrug is either enzymatically cleaved by the cells metabolic machinery or undergoes a conformational change in response to the low oxygen partial pressure. HAPs, hypoxia-activated prodrugs; RBCs, red blood cells.