| Literature DB >> 30804427 |
Nicholas G Nickols1,2,3, Ramin Nazarian4, Shuang G Zhao5, Victor Tan6, Vladislav Uzunangelov7, Zheng Xia8, Robert Baertsch7, Elad Neeman9, Allen C Gao10, George V Thomas11, Lauren Howard12, Amanda M De Hoedt13, Josh Stuart14, Theodore Goldstein15, Kim Chi16, Martin E Gleave16, Julie N Graff17, Tomasz M Beer18, Justin M Drake6, Christopher P Evans10, Rahul Aggarwal15, Adam Foye15, Felix Y Feng19, Eric J Small15, William J Aronson3,20, Stephen J Freedland13,21, Owen N Witte22, Jiaoti Huang23, Joshi J Alumkal18, Robert E Reiter3, Matthew B Rettig24,25,26.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) is incurable and progression after drugs that target the androgen receptor-signaling axis is inevitable. Thus, there is an urgent need to develop more effective treatments beyond hormonal manipulation. We sought to identify activated kinases in mCRPC as therapeutic targets for existing, approved agents, with the goal of identifying candidate drugs for rapid translation into proof of concept Phase II trials in mCRPC.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30804427 PMCID: PMC6853839 DOI: 10.1038/s41391-019-0134-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis ISSN: 1365-7852 Impact factor: 5.554
Fig. 1a Inferred kinase activation between mCRPC versus localized prostate adenocarcinoma (TCGA) by VIPER. The most activated (red) and repressed (blue) in the mCRPCs compared with localized prostate cancers (TCGA) with p < 0.05. Tick marks represent kinase targets projected onto the gene expression signature. Act: inferred differential activity; Exp: differential expression. MAPK3 = ERK1. b Presence or absence of amplification in selected MAPK pathway related genes in these patients. c ERK1/2 kinase targets differentially phosphorylated between mCRPC and treatment-naive localized prostate tissue. Data was filtered for a false discovery rate cutoff of 0.05, at least a 4-fold difference, and the presence of curated function on phosphosite.org
Fig. 2a Cytoplasmic epithelial staining for phosphorylated ERK1/2. NP normal gland, BN benign glands adjacent to primary prostate cancer, PCa untreated primary prostate cancer, CRPC castration resistant prostate cancer. b Absence (negative) or presence (positive) of ERK1/2 phosphorylation within resected primary prostate cancer. Recurrence is associated with ERK1/2 phosphorylation
Demographic, clinical, and pathological characteristics of patients that generated the TMAs
| ( | |
|---|---|
| Age, M (Q1–Q3) | 63 (58–67) |
| Race, n (%) | |
| Non-black | 82 (56%) |
| Black | 65 (44%) |
| Year of Surgery, M (Q1-Q3) | 1998 (1994–1999) |
| PSA (ng/mL), M (Q1-Q3) | 8.9 (5.6–13.4) |
| Pathological Grade Group, n (%): | |
| 1 | 74 (50%) |
| 2–3 | 67 (46%) |
| 4–5 | 6 (4%) |
| Positive Margins, n (%) | 58 (39%) |
| Seminal vesicle invasion, n (%) | 16 (11%) |
| Extracapsular extension, n (%) | 13 (9%) |
| Positive lymph nodes, n (%) | 26 (18%) |
| Follow-up (years), M (Q1–Q3) | 7.2 (6.2–8.7) |
SD standard deviation, M median, Q1 25th percentile, Q3 75th percentile, BMI body mass index, PSA prostate specific antigen
Fig. 3a A patient with mCRPC who had progressed on abiraterone, sipuleucel-T, enzalutamide, and radium-223 was treated with trametinib, which induced a PSA response of 85% at three and 93% at five months. b Schematic of ongoing proof of concept Phase II clinical trial of trametinib for patients with mCRPC who have progressed on one or more prior therapies for mCRPC (NCT02881242). Correlative analyses aim to identify patients most likely to respond and suggest possible pathways of resistance