| Literature DB >> 30743998 |
Maria Maddalena Simile1, Paola Bagella, Gianpaolo Vidili, Angela Spanu, Roberto Manetti, Maria Antonietta Seddaiu, Sergio Babudieri, Giordano Madeddu, Pier Andrea Serra, Matteo Altana, Panagiotis Paliogiannis.
Abstract
Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) is a highly-aggressive malignancy arising from the biliary tree, characterized by a steady increase in incidence globally and a high mortality rate. Most CCAs are diagnosed in the advanced and metastatic phases of the disease, due to the paucity of signs and symptoms in the early stages. This fact, along with the poor results of the local and systemic therapies currently employed, is responsible for the poor outcome of CCA patients and strongly supports the need for novel therapeutic agents and strategies. In recent years, the introduction of next-generation sequencing technologies has opened new horizons for a better understanding of the genetic pathophysiology of CCA and, consequently, for the identification and evaluation of new treatments tailored to the molecular features or alterations progressively elucidated. In this review article, we describe the potential targets under investigation and the current molecular therapies employed in biliary tract cancers. In addition, we summarize the main drugs against CCA under evaluation in ongoing trials and describe the preliminary data coming from these pioneering studies.Entities:
Keywords: biliary tree; cancer; cholangiocarcinoma; genomics; molecular pathways; targeted therapies
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30743998 PMCID: PMC6409688 DOI: 10.3390/medicina55020042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Incidence of mutations in targetable pathways in CCAs included into the COSMIC database. iCCA, intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma; eCCA, extrahepatic CCA.
| Gene | % | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| EGFR | 1.6 | 2.2–20% in other series [ |
| VEGF | 0.7 | VEGF overexpression has been reported in about 54% of iCCAs [ |
| KRAS | 23 | More common in eCCAs [ |
| NRAS | 4 | Similar distribution between iCCAs and eCCAs [ |
| BRAF | 4 | There were no BRAF mutations in 137 eCCA cases reviewed by Walter et al. They were detected in 3.3% of 723 iCCAs [ |
| FGFR2 | 2.1 | FGFR2 fusions were observed in approximately 3–50% of iCCAS [ |
| MET | 0.7 | MET has been found overexpressed in 12–58% of iCCAs [ |
| ROS1 | 0.7 | In other reports, the frequency of ROS1 alterations varies between 1.1% and 8.8% [ |
| PIK3CA | 7 | Slightly more frequent in eCCAs in accordance with Walter et al. [ |
| PTEN | 3.3 | Similar distribution between iCCAs and eCCAs [ |
| IDH1 | 9 | Rare in eCCAs [ |
| IDH2 | 3 | Not found in eCCAs [ |
| JAK1/2, STAT3 | 0.6–1% | JAK/STAT signaling pathway activated in 50–70% of iCCAS [ |
| ARID1A | 13 | Similar distribution between iCCAs and eCCAs [ |
| PBRM1 | 6 | More common in iCCAs [ |
| BAP1 | 9 | Rare in eCCAs [ |
Figure 1Chemical structures of the main tyrosine kinase inhibitors currently under investigation for targeted treatment of cholangiocarcinoma.
Ongoing clinical trials for targeted therapies in advanced-stage cholangiocarcinomas.
| Treatment | Target(s) | Phase | Identifier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gemcitabine + oxaliplatin + capecitabine vs. gemcitabine + oxaliplatin + panitumumab + capecitabine | EGFR | II | NCT00779454 |
| Gemcitabine + oxaliplatin + capecitabine + panitumumab or bevacizumab | EGFR − VEGFR | II | NCT01206049 |
| Trastuzumab + tipifarnib | HER2/neu + FTI | I | NCT00005842 |
| Varlitinib | EGFR | II | NCT02609958 |
| Gemcitabine + oxaliplatin + cetuximab + trastuzumab + gefitinib + lapatinib + sorafenib + crizotinib | Multiple targets | I/II | NCT02836847 |
| CART-EGFR | EGFR | I/II | NCT01869166 |
| Afatinib + capecitabine | EGFR | I | NCT02451553 |
| LY2801653 + cetuximab or cisplatin or gemcitabine or ramucirumab | Multiple targets | I | NCT01438554 |
| Pazopanib + GSK1120212 | Multiple targets | I | NCT01438554 |
| Sunitinib | Multiple targets | II | NCT01718327 |
| Gemcitabine + pazopanib | Multiple targets | II | NCT01855724 |
| Regorafenib | Multiple targets | II | NCT02053376 |
| Gemcitabine + oxaliplatin + regorafenib | Multiple targets | II | NCT02386397 |
| Ramucirumab | VEGFR | II | NCT02520141 |
| Ramucirumab + pembrolizumab | Multiple targets | I | NCT02443324 |
| Cediranib + AZD0530 | Multiple targets | I | NCT00475956 |
| Oxaliplatin + leucovorin calcium + fluorouracil + cediranib | Multiple targets | II | NCT01229111 |
| Sorafenib | VEGFR − PDGFR − BRAF | II | NCT00238212 |
| Sorafenib + oxaliplatin/capecitabine | VEGFR − PDGFR − BRAF | I/II | NCT00634751 |
| Ponatinib | FGFR | II | NCT02265341 |
| JNJ-42756493 | FGFR | I | NCT01703481 |
| BGJ398 | FGFR2 | II | NCT02150967 |
| ARQ087 | FGFR2 | II | NCT01752920 |
| FRA144 | FGFR2b | I | NCT02318329 |
| Ceritinib | ROS1 − ALK | II | NCT02638909 |
| Entrectinib | ROS1 − ALK | II | NCT02568267 |
| LDK378 (Ceritinib) | ROS1 − ALK | II | NCT02374489 |
| PLX8394 | BRAF | I/II | NCT02428712 |
| Gemcitabine + selumetinib vs gemcitabine | MEK | II | NCT02151084 |
| Refametinib | MEK | II | NCT02346032 |
| Trametinib vs 5-fluoruracil or capecitabine | MEK | II | NCT02042443 |
| Gemcitabine + MEK162 | MEK | II | NCT01828034 |
| Everolimus + gemcitabine | mTOR | I | NCT00949949 |
| Sirolimus + gemcitabine | mTOR | I | NCT01888302 |
| Copanlisib + gemcitabine | PI3K | II | NCT02631590 |
| AG-881 | IDH | I | NCT02481154 |
| AG-120 | IDH | I | NCT02073994 |
| AG-120 | IDH | III | NCT02989857 |
| Rucaparib + nivolumab | PARP | II | NCT03639935 |
| BBI-503 | STAT3 | II | NCT02232633 |
| Pembrolizumab + GM − CSF | PD1 | II | NCT02703714 |
| Pembrolizumab | PD1 | II | NCT02628067 |
| Pembrolizumab | PD1 | I/II | NCT02268825 |
| Nivolumab or Ipilimumab | PD1 − CTL4 | II | NCT02834013 |
Figure 2Chemical structures of promising agents included in ongoing clinical trials for targeted treatment of cholangiocarcinoma.
Figure 3Overview of some of the molecular pathways deregulated in cholangiocarcinoma and the available inhibitors of these cascades.