| Literature DB >> 30424016 |
Daniel Heudobler1, Michael Rechenmacher2, Florian Lüke3, Martin Vogelhuber4, Tobias Pukrop5, Wolfgang Herr6, Lina Ghibelli7, Christopher Gerner8, Albrecht Reichle9.
Abstract
In most clinical trials, thiazolidinediones do not show any relevant anti-cancer activity when used as mono-therapy. Clinical inefficacy contrasts ambiguous pre-clinical data either favoring anti-tumor activity or tumor promotion. However, if thiazolidinediones are combined with additional regulatory active drugs, so-called 'master modulators' of tumors, i.e., transcriptional modulators, metronomic low-dose chemotherapy, epigenetically modifying agents, protein binding pro-anakoinotic drugs, such as COX-2 inhibitors, IMiDs, etc., the results indicate clinically relevant communicative reprogramming of tumor tissues, i.e., anakoinosis, meaning 'communication' in ancient Greek. The concerted activity of master modulators may multifaceted diversify palliative care or even induce continuous complete remission in refractory metastatic tumor disease and hematologic neoplasia by establishing novel communicative behavior of tumor tissue, the hosting organ, and organism. Re-modulation of gene expression, for example, the up-regulation of tumor suppressor genes, may recover differentiation, apoptosis competence, and leads to cancer control-in contrast to an immediate, 'poisoning' with maximal tolerable doses of targeted/cytotoxic therapies. The key for uncovering the therapeutic potential of Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) agonists is selecting the appropriate combination of master modulators for inducing anakoinosis: Now, anakoinosis is trend setting by establishing a novel therapeutic pillar while overcoming classic obstacles of targeted therapies, such as therapy resistance and (molecular-)genetic tumor heterogeneity.Entities:
Keywords: COX-2 inhibitor; all-trans retinoic acid; anakoinosis; cancer and reprogramming of energy metabolism; communicative reprogramming; glitazones; master modulators; metabolic regulations; metronomic low-dose chemotherapy; nuclear transcription factors; organ cross-talk; peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs), energy homeostasis; systems biology; therapy pillar; undruggable targets
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30424016 PMCID: PMC6274845 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19113540
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Explanation of communication-associated terms.
| Communication-Associated Terms | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Anakoinosis | Anakoinosis is a novel paradigm for cancer treatment based on a key role for communicative reprogramming of tumor systems. Building on a systems biology approach to cancer, anakoinosis utilizes a range of non-cancer and cancer drugs in combination to treat advanced tumor disease, such as pioglitazone. In contrast to standard therapies, anakoinosis protocols are characterized by low toxicity and a good safety profile, with encouraging responses in a number of clinical trials to date. The use of drug repurposing, that is the use of non-cancer drugs as cancer treatments, is especially a notable feature of this approach. |
| Pro-anakoinotic therapeutic tools | Transcriptional modulators, nuclear receptor agonists and antagonists, metronomic low-dose chemotherapy, cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitors, IMiDs, arsenic trioxide, liposomal encapsulated small oligonucleotide encoding small activating RNAs, etc. |
| Metronomic tumor therapy | Metronomic tumor therapy may be defined as the frequent administration of (repurposed) drugs at doses significantly below the maximum tolerated dose with no prolonged drug-free breaks, or as the minimum biologically effective dose of an agent given as a continuous dosing regimen with no prolonged drug-free breaks that still leads to anti-tumor activity. |
| Rationalizations | Describe the physical organization of tumor-associated normative notions (e.g. hallmarks of cancer); are to some degree histology- and genotype-independent; may be re-directed and reorganized by anakoinosis. |
| Metabolism of evolution | The sum of extrinsically, i.e., therapeutically, and intrinsically inducible evolutionary processes within the tumor environment (tumor stroma, hosting organ, distant organ sites). |
| Modularity | Modularity describes the degree and specificity to which systems’ objects, i.e. cells, pathways, molecules, therapeutic targets etc. may be communicatively rededicated by anakoinosis. |
| Validity and denotation | Validity of systems objects, functions and hubs: Availability on demand at distinct systems stages; denotation: Current functional impact at a distinct systems stage, e.g. of potentially tumor-promoting pathways. In the bio-world, presence and functioning of an object (e.g., an enzyme), respectively. |
Glitazones including treatment schedules in metastatic cancer or hematologic neoplasia.
| Glitazones in Refractory Tumors or Hematologic Neoplasia | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neoplasia | No | Chemotherapy | Transcriptional Modulators | Small | Best Response | Reference |
|
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| Liposarcomas, intermediate to high-grade (case reports) | - | - | Troglitazone | - | Histological and biochemical differentiation | [ |
| Liposarcoma | 3 | Trofosfamide * | Troglitazone | - | Lineage-appropriate differentiation can be induced pharmacologically in a human solid tumor. | [ |
| Liposarcoma | 12 | - | Rosiglitazone | - | Rosiglitazone is not effective as an antitumoral drug in the treatment of liposarcomas | [ |
| Kaposi sarcoma, refractory | 1 | Trofosfamide * | Pioglitazone | COX-2 inhibitor | Partial remission | [ |
| (Hem-)angiosarcomas | 12 | Trofosfamide * | Pioglitazone | COX-2 inhibitor | Continuos complete remission | [ |
|
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| Refractory breast cancer (Phase II study) | 22 | - | Troglitazone | - | No significant effect | [ |
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| Melanoma III (versus DTIC), phase II | 6 | Trofosfamide * | Pioglitazone | Temsirolimus | Partial remission, | [ |
| Melanoma (randomized) | ||||||
| Melanoma II Arm M | 35 | Trofosfamide * | Pioglitazone | - | Stable disease | [ |
| Arm A/M | 32 | Trofosfamide * | Pioglitazone | COX-2 inhibitor | Partial remission | |
|
| ||||||
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | 38 | Capecitabine * | Pioglitazone | COX-2 inhibitor | Partial remission | [ |
|
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| Cholangiocellular carcinoma | 21 | Trofosfamide * | Pioglitazone | COX-2 inhibitor | Partial remission | [ |
|
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| Chemotherapy-resistant metastatic colorectal cancer (phase II study) | 25 | - | Troglitazone | - | Not active for the treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer | [ |
| Renal clear cell carcinoma, relapsed | 18 | Capecitabine * | Pioglitazone | COX-2 inhibitor | Partial remission | [ |
| Renal clear cell carinoma, relapsed | 33 | Capecitabine * | Pioglitazone Interferon-alpha | COX-2 inhibitor | Continuous complete remission | [ |
|
| ||||||
| Prostate cancer | 41 | - | Troglitazone | - | Lengthened stabilisation of prostate-specific antigen | [ |
| Castration-resistant prostate cancer | 61 | Treosulfan * | Pioglitazone, Dexamethasone | COX-2 inhibitor | Long-term tumor control at minimal disease | [ |
| Castration-resistant prostate cancer | 36 | Capecitabine * | Pioglitazone, Dexamethasone | COX-2 inhibitor | Long-term tumor control | [ |
| Rising serum prostate-specific antigen level after radical prostatectomy and/or radiation therapy | 106 | - | Rosiglitazone | Rosiglitazone did not increase PSA doubling time or prolong the time to disease progression | [ | |
| Gastric cancer Arm A/M | 21 | Capecitabine * | Pioglitazone | COX-2 inhibitor | Partial remission | [ |
| Arm M | 21 | Capecitabine * | Pioglitazone no impact | |||
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| Glioblastoma, refractory | 14 | Capecitabine * | Pioglitazone | COX-2 inhibitor | Disease stabilization | [ |
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| Multiple myeloma, third-line | 6 | Treosulfan * | Pioglitazone, | Lenalidomide | Complete remission | [ |
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| Langerhans cell histiocytosis, | 2 + 7 | Trofosfamide * | Pioglitazone | COX-2 inhibitor | Continuous complete remission | [ |
|
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| Hodgkin lymphoma, refractory | 3 | Treosulfan * | Pioglitazone, Dexamethasone | COX-2 inhibitor Everolimus | Continuous | [ |
|
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| Chronic myelocytic leukemia without moleclar CR | 24 | - | Pioglitazone | Imatinib | Molecular complete remission | [ |
| Acute myelocytic leukemia | ||||||
| Acute myelocytic leukemia | 5 + 7 | Azacitidine | Pioglitazone All-trans retinoic acid | Molecular complete remission | [ | |
Figure 1Pioglitazone in tumor therapy regulates the communicative interface of transcriptional modulation, lipid and carbohydrate metabolism, particularly in combination with additional master modulators. Thus, tumor-promoting pathways can be functionally attenuated without direct blocking tumor-promoting pathways or by shutting off tumor-associated cellular compartments. Clinical equivalents are diversification of palliative care, even continuous complete remission.
Figure 2Pioglitazone, operating communication processes in tumors: Clinical relevance.