| Literature DB >> 31093356 |
Kyungsuk Jung1, Hyunseok Kang2, Ranee Mehra2.
Abstract
The landscape of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) has been changing rapidly due to growing proportion of HPV-related disease and development of new therapeutic agents. At the same time, there has been a constant need for individually tailored treatment based on genetic biomarkers in order to optimize patient survival and alleviate treatment-related toxicities. In this regard, aberrations of PI3K pathway have important clinical implications in the treatment of HNSCC. They frequently constitute 'gain of function' mutations which trigger oncogenesis, and PI3K mutations can also lead to emergence of drug resistance after treatment with EGFR inhibitors. In this article, we review PI3K pathway as a target of treatment for HNSCC and summarize PI3K/mTOR inhibitors that are currently under clinical trials. In light of recent advancement of immune checkpoint inhibitors, consideration of PI3K inhibitors as potential immune modulators is also suggested.Entities:
Keywords: Akt; Drug resistance; EGFR; HNSCC; HPV; PI3K; PIK3CA; Precision medicine; mTOR
Year: 2018 PMID: 31093356 PMCID: PMC6460806 DOI: 10.1186/s41199-018-0030-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers Head Neck ISSN: 2059-7347
Fig. 1Linear composition of p110α and p85α molecules. Red arrowheads in p110α indicate ‘hotspot’ mutations. C2 in p110α is a putative membrane-binding domain. Breakpoint cluster region-homology (BH) domain in p85α has shown GTPase activating protein (GAP) activity toward Rab family. Rab GTPase induces degradation and deregulation of activated growth factor receptors, and mutated Rab GAP induces cell transformation [148]. However, it is unclear if this function is still active in complex with p110α [149]. BH domain in p85α is flanked by proline-rich domain, implying an auto-regulatory mechanism in interaction with its SH3 domain [150]
Fig. 2Interactive signaling pathway of EGFR-PI3K-mTOR. PI3K binds to cytoplasmic tail of receptor tyrosine kinase via SH domains within p85 regulatory subunit. Activation signal can also be transferred through Ras-binding domain in p110 catalytic subunit which tethers PI3K molecule to Ras protein in growth receptors. p110 activation by Ras binding is inhibited by p85 subunit which can be released by co-stimulation of SH domain by tyrosine kinase [151]
Clinical trials evaluating PI3K or mTOR inhibitor in patients with HNSCC
| Agent | Clinical Trial Identifier | Other Targeted Agent | Additional Therapy | Conditions | Phase | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PI3K inhibitor | ||||||
| Alpelisib (BYL719) | NCT02145312 | – | – | R/M HNSCC, failed to respond to platinum-based therapy | II | Not yet recruiting |
| NCT02537223 | – | Cisplatin, radiation | Locoregionally advanced HNSCC, not previously treated | I | Active, recruiting | |
| NCT01602315 | Cetuximab | – | R/M HNSCC | I/II | Terminated (sponsor withdrawal) | |
| NCT02298595 | Cetuximab | Cisplatin | HPV-associated oropharyngeal SCC | I/II | Not yet recruiting | |
| Buparlisib (BKM120) | NCT01816984 | Cetuximab | – | R/M HNC | I/II | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT01737450 | – | – | Recurrent or progressive HNC | II | Active, recruiting | |
| NCT02113878 | – | Cisplatin, radiation | Locally advanced HNSCC | I | Active, recruiting | |
| PX-866 | NCT01252628 | Cetuximab | R/M HNSCC | II | Completed | |
| NCT01204099 | Docetaxel | Locally advanced or R/M HNSCC | II | Completed | ||
| Copanlisib | NCT02822482 | Cetuximab | – | HNSCC with PI3KCA mutation/amplification or PTEN loss | I/II | Active, recruiting |
| INCB050465 | NCT02646748 | Itacitinib | Pembrolizumab | Advanced solid tumors | I | Active, recruiting |
| mTOR inhibitor | ||||||
| Sirolimus | NCT01195922 | – | – | Advanced HNSCC, not previously treated | I/II | Completed |
| Temsirolimus | NCT01172769 | – | – | R/M HNSCC | II | Completed |
| NCT01009203 | Erlotinib | – | Advanced HNSCC, refractory to platinum | II | Terminated (high patient withdrawal rate) | |
| NCT01016769 | – | Paclitaxel, carboplatin | R/M HNSCC | I/II | Active, not recruiting | |
| NCT02215720 | Cetuximab | – | Advanced or metastatic solid tumors | I | Active, recruiting | |
| NCT00703625 | – | Docetaxel | Resistant solid malignancies | I | Completed | |
| Everolimus (RAD001) | NCT01332279 | Erlotinib | Radiation | Recurrent HNC, previously treated with radiation | I | Withdrawn (sponsor withdrawal) |
| NCT01313390 | – | Docetaxel | R/M HNSCC | I/II | Terminated (lack of recruitment) | |
| NCT01009346 | Cetuximab | Cisplatin, carboplatin | R/M HNSCC | I/II | Terminated (toxicity) | |
| NCT01051791 | – | – | R/M HNSCC | II | Active, not recruiting | |
| PI3K/mTOR dual inhibitor | ||||||
| SF1126 | NCT02644122 | – | – | R/M HNSCC | II | Active, recruiting |
| Gedatolisib | NCT03065062 | Palbociclib | – | Advanced HNSCC | I | Active, recruiting |
| Dactolisib (BEZ235) | NCT00620594 | – | – | Advanced solid tumors | I | Completed |
| PI3K/HDAC dual inhibitor | ||||||
| CUDC-907 | NCT02307240 | – | – | Advanced or relapsed solid tumors | I | Active, recruiting |