| Literature DB >> 30866992 |
Shuang Qin1, Anping Li2, Ming Yi1, Shengnan Yu1, Mingsheng Zhang1, Kongming Wu3,4.
Abstract
Angiogenesis has always been the topic of major scientific interest in the field of malignant tumors. Nowadays, targeting angiogenesis has achieved success in various carcinomas by several mechanisms, including the use of anti-angiogenic small molecule receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). The development of TKIs targeting pro-angiogenic receptors, mainly vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR) family, have significantly improved the outcome of certain types of cancers, like renal cell carcinoma, hepatocellular carcinoma, and colorectal carcinoma. However, the general response rate is not very satisfactory. The particular toxicity profile and resistance to anti-angiogenic targeted agents are unavoidable, and no specific marker is available to screen responsive patients to TKIs for precision therapy. To date, about 11 anti-angiogenic TKIs with different binding capacities to angiogenic receptor tyrosine kinase have been approved for the treatment of patients with advanced cancers. This review presents all approved anti-angiogenic small molecule receptor TKIs so far with an emphasis on their indications and clinical efficacy. We also discuss the combination between TKIs and immune checkpoint blockade inhibitors based on the most recent exciting outcome in immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-angiogenic; Immunotherapy; Tyrosine kinase inhibitors; VEGF
Year: 2019 PMID: 30866992 PMCID: PMC6417086 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-019-0718-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1Main targets of approved anti-angiogenic receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). All approved anti-angiogenic receptor TKIs can target multiple receptor sites simultaneously. The main targets included vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR), platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR), fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR), c-Kit, and c-Met. Anti-angiogenic TKIs block the kinase activity of receptor and transduction of downstream signal involved in the proliferation, migration, and survival
Principal clinical trials for the approval of anti-angiogenesis receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs)
| Drug (company) | Indication | Pivotal study | Study design | PFS | OS | ORR | Approval time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sorafenib (Bayer and Onyx) | RCC | NCT00073307 [ | Phase III, sorafenib vs. placebo | HR = 0.44, | HR = 0.77, | 10% vs. 2% | 2005 (FDA) |
| HCC | NCT00105443 [ | Phase III, sorafenib vs. placebo | HR = 0.58, | HR = 0.69, | 2% vs. 1% | 2007 (FDA) | |
| DTC | NCT00984282 [ | Phase III, sorafenib vs. placebo | HR = 0.59, | HR = 0·80, | 12.2% vs. 0.5% | 2013 (FDA) | |
| Sunitinib (Pfizer) | GIST | NCT00075218 [ | Phase III, sunitinib vs. placebo | HR = 0.33, | HR = 0·49, | 7% vs. 0% | 2007 (FDA) |
| RCC | NCT00098657 NCT00083889 [ | Phase III, sunitinib vs. INF-a | HR = 0.42, | HR = 0.82, | 31% vs. 6% | 2007 (FDA) | |
| pNETs | NCT00428597 [ | Phase III, sunitinib vs. placebo | HR = 0.42, | NA | 9.3% vs. 0% | 2011 (FDA) | |
| Pazopanib (GlaxoSmith Kline) | RCC | NCT00720941 [ | Phase III, pazopanib vs. placebo | HR = 0.46, | NA | 30% vs. 3% | 2009 (FDA) |
| STS | NCT00753688 [ | Phase III, pazopanib vs. placebo | HR = 0.31, | HR = 0.86, | 9% vs. 0% | 2012 (FDA) | |
| Axitinib (Pfizer) | RCC | NCT00678392 [ | Phase III, axitinib vs. sorafenib | HR = 0.67, | HR = 0.97, | 19% vs. 9% | 2012 (FDA) |
| Regorafenib (Bayer) | CRC | NCT01103323 [ | Phase III, regorafenib vs. placebo | HR = 0.49, | HR = 0.77. | 1.0% vs. 0.4% | 2012 (FDA) |
| NCT01584830 [ | Phase III, regorafenib vs. placebo | HR = 0.31, p < 0.0001 | HR = 0.55, | 4% vs. 0% | |||
| GIST | NCT01271712 [ | Phase III, regorafenib vs. placebo | HR = 0.27, | HR = 0.77, | 4.5% vs. 1.5% | 2013 (FDA) | |
| HCC | NCT01774344 [ | Phase III, regorafenib vs. placebo | HR = 0.46, | HR = 0.63, | 11% vs. 4% | 2017 (FDA) | |
| Cabozantinib (Exelixis) | MTC | NCT00704730 [ | Phase III, cabozantinib vs. placebo | HR = 0.28, | HR = 0.98 | 28% vs. 0% | 2012 (FDA) |
| RCC | NCT01865747 [ | Phase III, cabozantinib vs. everolimus | HR = 0.58, | HR = 0.66, | 21% vs.5% | 2016 (FDA) | |
| Nintedanib (Boehringer) | IPF | NCT00514683 [ | Phase II, nintedanib vs. placebo | NA | NA | NA | 2014 (FDA) |
| NCT01335464 NCT01335477 [ | Phase III, nintedanib vs. placebo | ||||||
| NSCLC | NCT00805194 [ | Phase III, docetaxel + nintedanib vs. docetaxel + placebo | HR = 0.79, | HR = 0.94, | 4.4% vs. 3.3% | 2014 (EMA) | |
| Lenvatinib (Eisai ) | DTC | NCT01321554 [ | Phase III, lenvatinib vs. placebo | HR = 0.21, | HR = 0.73, | 64.8% vs. 1.5% | 2015 (FDA) |
| RCC | NCT01136733 [ | Phase II, lenvatinib + everolimus vs. lenvatinib vs. everolimus | HR = 0.4, | HR = 0.51, | 43% vs. 27% vs. 6% | 2016 (FDA) | |
| HCC | NCT01761266 [ | Phase III, lenvatinib vs. sorafenib | HR = 0.64, | HR = 0.92 | 40.6% vs. 12.4% | 2018 (FDA) | |
| Apatinib (Hengrui) | GC | NCT01512745 [ | Phase III, apatinib vs. placebo | HR = 0.709, | HR = 0.444, | 2.8% vs. 0% | 2014 (CFDA) |
| Anlotinib (Chia-taiTianqing) | NSCLC | NCT02388919 [ | Phase III, anlotinib vs. placebo | HR = 0.25, | HR = 0.68, | 9.2% vs. 0.7% | 2018 (CFDA) |
| Fruquintinib (Hutchison) | CRC | NCT02314819 [ | Phase III, fruquintinib vs. placebo | HR = 0.26, | HR = 0.65, | 4.7% vs. 0% | 2018 (CFDA) |
Abbreviation: RCC renal cell carcinoma, HCC hepatocellular carcinoma, DTC differentiated thyroid cancer, GIST gastro-intestinal stromal tumor, pNETs pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors, STS soft tissue sarcoma, CRC colorectal cancer, MTC medullary thyroid cancer, IPF idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer, GC gastric cancer, PFS progression-free survival, OS overall survival, ORR objective response rate, NA not available, FDA US Food and Drug Administration, CFDA China Food and Drug Administration, EMA European Medicines Agency
*Lenvatinib + everolimus vs. everolimus