| Literature DB >> 30464589 |
Jieqing Li1,2, Qiongyu Hao2, Wei Cao2,3, Jaydutt V Vadgama2,4, Yong Wu2,4.
Abstract
Breast cancer has a high incidence worldwide. The results of substantial studis reveal that inflammation plays an important role in the initiation, development, and aggressiveness of many malignancies. The use of celecoxib, a novel NSAID, is repetitively associated with the reduced risk of the occurrence and progression of a number of types of cancer, particularly breast cancer. This observation is also substantiated by various meta-analyses. Clinical trials have been implemented on integration treatment of celecoxib and shown encouraging results. Celecoxib could be treated as a potential candidate for antitumor agent. There are, nonetheless, some unaddressed questions concerning the precise mechanism underlying the anticancer effect of celecoxib as well as its activity against different types of cancer. In this review, we discuss different mechanisms of anticancer effect of celecoxib as well as preclinical/clinical results signifying this beneficial effect.Entities:
Keywords: COX-2; breast cancer; celecoxib; inflammation
Year: 2018 PMID: 30464589 PMCID: PMC6208493 DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S178567
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Manag Res ISSN: 1179-1322 Impact factor: 3.989
Preclinical studies on combination of celecoxib and other therapeutic drugs in BC
| Study | Combination reagent | Subject | Mechanism of action |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| van Wijngaarden et al | Doxorubicin | MDA-MB-231 cell line | NF-κB-mediated increase in intracellular accumulation |
| Irie et al | 5-FU | BALB/c mice | Suppression of VEGF, enhancement of IFN-γ |
| Lim et al | Paclitaxcel and vinblastine | KB and KBV20C cell lines | Increasing G2 phase cell cycle arrest, C-PARP production |
| Hahn et al | DC-based cell vaccines | BALB/c mice (4T1) | Elevation of IFN-γ and IL-4 secretion by CD4+ T cells |
| Basu et al | Dendritic cell-based cancer vaccine | MMTV-PyV MT mice | Reduction in IDO and survivin |
| Li et al | PD-1 mAb | BALB/c mice (4T1) | Increasing CXCL9 and CXCL10 |
| Cho et al | Nelfinavir (Viracept) | MCF7, MCF7/Dox | Aggravation of ER stress |
| Mustafa and Kruger | F-l-Leu | MMAC-1 cell line | Activation of PTEN |
| Niu et al | Minocycline hydrochloride | Nude mice (MDA-MB-435S) | Inhibition of VEGF and MMP-9 |
| Yu et al | Matrine | MDA-MB-231 cell line | Impact on EGF/VEGF-VEGFR1-Akt-NF-κB signaling pathway |
| Wang et al | Berbamine | MDA-MB-231 and MDA-MB-435S cell lines | Inhibition of Akt, NF-κB target, c-Met, Bcl-2/Bax, osteopontin, VEGF, MMP-9, and MMP-2 |
| Jeon et al | Luteolin | MCF-7, MCF7/HER18, MDA- MB-231, and SkBr3 cell lines BALB/c nude mice (MDA-MB-231) | In MCF-7 and MCF7/HER18 cells: Akt inactivation and ERK signaling inhibition In MDA-MB-231 and SkBr3 cells: Akt inactivation and ERK signaling activation |
| Kisková et al | Resveratrol | Sprague Dawley rats | Inducing GDF15 |
| Thill et al | Vitamin D | MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 cell lines | Suppression of aromatase expression |
Notes:
MCF7/Dox, a doxorubicin/multidrug-resistant variant of MCF7.
MCF7/Tax, a taxol-resistant variant of MCF7.
BT-1.0B and BT-1.0E, two trastuzumab-resistant variants of BT474.
Abbreviations: BC, breast cancer; CTLs, cytotoxic T cells; CXCL, C–X–C motif ligand; DC, dendritic cell; ER, estrogen receptor; F-l-Leu, N-(9-fluorenyl-methyloxycarbonyl)-l-leucine; 5-FU, fluorouracil; GDF, growth differentiation factor; GM-CSF, granulocyte–macrophage colony-stimulating factor; IDO, indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase; IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin; MMAC, mammary adenocarcinoma cell; MMP, matrix metalloproteinase; PARP, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase; PD-1 mAb, programmed death 1 monoclonal antibody; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor.
Clinical trials of celecoxib on BC (ClinicalTrial.gov)
| NCT number | Phase | Start date | Status | Patients | Enrollment | Interventions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT00075673 | I | November 2003 | Terminated | With recurrent or metastatic (stage IV) disease | 6 | Celecoxib on days 1–21, repeat every 21 days |
| Vinorelbine ditartrate on days 7, 14, and 21, repeat every 21 days | ||||||
| NCT01425476 | I/II | July 2008 | Completed | With increased risk of BC | 45 | Celecoxib |
| Cholecalciferol 400 IU or 2,000 IU/daily for 30 days | ||||||
| NCT00201773 | II | July 2003 | Completed | With stage II–IV disease | 22 | Exemestane 25 mg QD for 16 weeks |
| Celecoxib 200 mg BID for 16 weeks | ||||||
| NCT00291694 | II | April 2003 | Completed | With increased risk of BC | 72 | Celecoxib 400 mg BID for 12 months |
| Placebo | ||||||
| NCT00056082 | II | January 2003 | Completed | With increased risk of BC | 110 | Celecoxib 400 mg BID for 12 months |
| NCT00291122 | – | January 2003 | Completed | With T1 or T2 noninvasive BC | 100 | Celecoxib 400 mg BID |
| NCT00070057 | I | April 2009 | Completed | 75 | Celecoxib for 1–3 weeks | |
| Celecoxib (the doses are higher than those of the aforementioned studies) for 1–3 weeks | ||||||
| No Intervention | ||||||
| NCT01769625 | I/II | January 2009 | Completed | With invasive breast carcinoma (≥1 cm) | 31 | Placebo + cholecalciferol 400 IU |
| Placebo + cholecalciferol 2,000 IU | ||||||
| Celecoxib 400 mg + cholecalciferol 400 IU | ||||||
| Celecoxib 400 mg + cholecalciferol 2,000 IU | ||||||
| NCT03185871 | II | September 2017 | Recruiting | With stages T1cN0 to T3N0 BC (≥1 cm), ER/PgR (+), without lymph node spread | 45 | Celecoxib 200 mg BID for 2 weeks |
| NCT01881048 | I | December 2009 | Active, not recruiting | With BC | 42 | No intervention |
| Omega-3 fatty | ||||||
| Celecoxib | ||||||
| NCT00045591 | II | February 2003 | Terminated | With invasive BC | 39 | Celecoxib 100 mg BID |
| Celecoxib 400 mg BID | ||||||
| NCT00088972 | II | November 2004 | Terminated | With increased risk of BC | 8 | Celecoxib |
| Placebo | ||||||
| NCT00328432 | I | June 2003 | Completed | With T1 or T2 noninvasive breast | 100 | Celecoxib 400 mg BID |
| NCT00305643 | III | February 2003 | Terminated | With metastatic colorectal cancer or MBC | 11 | Celecoxib 200 mg BID + standard capecitabine treatment |
| Placebo with standard capecitabine treatment |
Abbreviations: BC, breast cancer; ER, estrogen receptor; MBC, metastatic BC; PgR, progesterone receptor; BID, twice a day; QD, once a day.
Summary of clinical trials on the combination of endocrine therapy and celecoxib
| Study | Year | Phase | R | Treatment | n | Clinical response (n) | Patients | Primary objective | Secondary objective | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CR | PR | SD | PD | NR | |||||||||
| Canney et al | 2006 | II | No | EXE 25 mg QD + CEL 400 mg BID | 53 | 4 | 12 | 23 | 8 | 6 | Postmenopausal women, hormone receptor positive, ABC who had PD | The percentage of patients who had neither discontinued therapy nor progressed at 6 months | Response rates, duration of response, time to next progression, toxicity graded according to the CTC version 2.0 and QOL at baseline and 3 months |
| Dirix et al | 2008 | II | Yes | EXE 25 mg QD | 55 | 3 | 8 | 13 | 6 | Postmenopausal women, hormone receptor positive, ABC who had PD after treatment with TAM | The rate of clinical benefits | Tolerability, objective response rate, TTP, duration of clinical benefit | |
| Chow et al | 2008 | II | Yes | EXE 25 mg QD | 24 | 12 | 2 | Postmenopausal women with histologic proof of invasive BC with positive ER and/or PgR status | |||||
| Falandry et al | 2009 | III | Yes | EXE 25 mg QD + celecoxib 400 mg BID | 74 | 1 | 14 | 34 | 22 | 5 | Postmenopausal women with ER- and/or PgR-positive MBC with measurable lesions >1 cm in diameter were eligible for enrollment | Progression-free survival | Assessments of tumor response and toxicities |
| Lustberg et al | 2011 | II | No | EXE (25 mg/day, 8 weeks)→EXE (25 mg/day) + CEL (800 mg/day, 8 weeks) | 22 | 0 | 8 | 12 | 1 | 1 | Postmenopausal women with ER- and/or PgR-positive stage II–III BCs | ||
Note:
Measured by European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire core - 30 version 3.0 (EORTC QLQ C-30 v3.0) and European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire Breast-Cancer-Specific 23(EORTC QLQ-BR23).
Abbreviations: ABC, advanced BC; BC, breast cancer; CEL, celecoxib; CR, complete response; CTC, common toxicity criteria; ER, estrogen receptor; EXE, exemestane; LET, letrozole; MBC, metastatic BC; n, number of patients; NR, not reassessed; PD, progressive disease; PgR, progesterone receptor; PR, partial response; QOL, quality of life; R, randomized study; SD, stable disease; TAM, tamoxifen; TTP, time to progression.
Figure 1The identified mechanisms of anticancer effect of celecoxib.
Abbreviations: EP1, prostaglandin E2 receptor 1; MMP, matrix metalloproteinase; NK, natural killer; PEG2, prostaglandin E2; PGH2, prostaglandin E2; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor.