| Literature DB >> 30791940 |
Daniela Criscuolo1, Francesco Morra1, Riccardo Giannella2, Roberta Visconti1, Aniello Cerrato1, Angela Celetti3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Novel therapeutic strategies are urgently needed for the treatment of metastatic Urothelial Bladder Cancer. DNA damaging repair (DDR) targeting has been introduced in cinical trials for bladder cancer patients that carry alterations in homologous DNA repair genes, letting to envisage susceptibility to the Poly (adenosine diphosphate [ADP]) ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitors. MAIN BODY: PARP inhibition, by amplifying the DNA damage, augments the mutational burden and promotes the immune priming of the tumor by increasing the neoantigen exposure and determining upregulation of programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression. Thus, the combination of PARP-inhibition and the PD/PD-L1 targeting may represent a compelling strategy to treat bladder cancer and has been introduced in recent clinical trials. The targeting of DDR has been also used in combination with epigenetic drugs able to modulate the expression of genes involved in DDR, and also able to act as immunomodulator agents suggesting their use in combination with immune-checkpoint inhibitors.Entities:
Keywords: BRCAness; Biomarkers; CCDC6; DNA damage response; Epigenetic agents; Immunotherapy; PARP trapping; RRx-001; Synthetic lethality; Viral mimicry
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30791940 PMCID: PMC6385418 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-019-1089-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1The homologous recombination (HR) repair deficiency represents an opportunity for a synthetic lethality approach through the use of PARP inhibitors (PARPi). The DNA methyltransferase inhibitors (DNMTi) enhance the cytotoxic effects of PARPi by increasing the PARP1 trapping at DNA. At the same time, the accumulation of DNA damage, as a consequence of cell’s inability to repair the DSBs, results in a high tumor mutational burden and tumor surface neoantigens load associated with increased infiltration of T lymphocyte into tumor microenvironment. These events trigger the compensatory upregulation of PD-1/PD-L1 pathway offering the possibility to use the immune checkpoint inhibitors in order to kill the cancer cells that elude the immune system. Thus, targeting the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway with immune checkpoint inhibitors may rappresent an attractive approach for treament of the tumor with defects of HR repair
Ongoing phase I/II studies testing PARP-inhibitors, immune checkpoint inhibitors and epigenetic drugs as monotherapy or in combinatorial regimen in advanced urothelial cancer
|
| Phase | Patients | PARP inhibitor | Checkpoint inhibitor | Epigenetic drug | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT03448718 | II | Metastatic Urothelial Cancer Harboring DNA Damage Response Gene Alterations | Olaparib | N/A | ||
| NCT03375307 | II | Metastatic or Advanced Urothelial Cancer With DNA-Repair Defects | Olaparib | N/A | ||
| NCT03397394 (UCLA) | II | Locally Advanced or Metastatic Urothelial Carcinoma | Rucaparib | N/A | ||
| NCT02736266 | II | Muscle-invasive Urothelial Bladder Carcinoma | Pembrolizumab | N/A | ||
| NCT02951767 (IMvigor 210) | II | Locally Advanced or Metastatic Urothelial Bladder Cancer | Atezolizumab | 36 | ||
| NCT02108652 (IMvigor 211) | II | Locally Advanced or Metastatic Urothelial Bladder Cancer | Atezolizumab | 79 | ||
| NCT02546661 (BISCAY) | Ib | Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer | Olaparib | Durvalumab | N/A | |
| NCT03534492 (NEODURVARIB) | II | Prior to Surgery of Resectable Urothelial Bladder Cancer | Olaparib | Durvalumab | N/A | |
| NCT03459846 (BAYOU) | II | Advanced, Platinum-Ineligible Bladder Cancer | Olaparib | Durvalumab | N/A | |
| NCT02619253 | I | Advanced renal or urothelial cell carcinoma | Pembrolizumab | Vorinostat | N/A | |
| NCT03179943 | II | Advanced, Platinum-Ineligible Bladder Cancer | Atezolizumab | Guadecitabine | N/A |