| Literature DB >> 31731457 |
Carol Lee1, Siu Tim Cheung1,2.
Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a major global health problem and its treatment options have been limited. Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) is a transcription factor important for various cellular processes. Overexpression and constitutive activation of STAT3 have been frequently found in HCC and associated with poor prognosis. Ample evidence has shown that STAT3 plays pivotal roles in the initiation, progression, metastasis and immune suppression of HCC. Thus, STAT3 has attracted attention as a novel therapeutic target in HCC. Clinical trials have investigated STAT3-targeted therapeutics either as monotherapy or in combination with chemotherapeutic agents, immune checkpoint inhibitors and alternative targeted drugs. Some of these studies have yielded encouraging results. Particularly, napabucasin-a cancer stemness inhibitor targeting STAT3-driven gene transcription-has stood out with its promising clinical efficacy and safety profile. Nonetheless, clinical investigations of STAT3-targeted therapies in HCC are limited and more efforts are strongly urged to evaluate their clinical performance in HCC. Here, we provide a comprehensive review of the roles of STAT3 in HCC and follow by comprehensive analysis of STAT3 targeted strategies.Entities:
Keywords: STAT3; combination therapy; hepatocellular carcinoma; targeted therapy; transcription factor
Year: 2019 PMID: 31731457 PMCID: PMC6895841 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11111646
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1The STAT3 signaling pathway and its crosstalk with NF-kB. STAT3 is activated primarily by cytokines and growth factors, in addition to other signaling molecules. Canonically, ligand binding to receptors triggers phosphorylation of tyrosine kinases and subsequently STAT3 at Y705, followed by STAT3 dimerization and translocation to the nucleus where it drives transcription of target genes involved in cell survival and proliferation. Non-canonically, STAT3 can also be phosphorylated at S727, translocate to the mitochondrion, as well as autoregulate its own transcription to produce u-STAT3. Under normal conditions, STAT3 activation is under tight negative regulation by SOCS, PTP and PIAS members. Remarkably, STAT3 is involved in extensive crosstalk with the inflammatory NF-kB pathway. Activated NF-kB has been reported to either activate or inhibit STAT3 signaling, respectively by producing various cytokines including the major STAT3-inducing cytokine IL-6 and preventing reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation responsible for oxidizing negative regulators of STAT3. In return, STAT3 may sustain NF-kB activation via p300-mediated acetylation. Moreover, u-STAT3 and u-NF-kB can work in concert to coregulate another set of genes.
Figure 2STAT3-mediated oncogenesis in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). IL-6 and IL-22 are major stimuli that activate STAT3 signaling in HCC cells. Activated STAT3 promotes HCC cell proliferation, anti-apoptosis, migration, invasion, angiogenesis and stemness properties via transcriptional regulation of target genes, cooperation with NF-kB and epigenetic regulation involving miRNA. A paracrine STAT3 activation loop between tumor and stromal cells also exerts suppressive effects in various immune cells in the HCC tumor microenvironment.
Clinical trials of napabucasin: cancer stemness inhibitor targeting STAT3-driven gene transcription.
| NCT No. | Phase | Therapy | Cancer Types | Brief Description | Time | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT | Ib | Monotherapy | Advanced solid cancers | Dose escalation achieved | 2009–2019 | [ |
| Ib | Advanced solid cancers | Safety and antitumor activity demonstrated in higher strength capsule | [ | |||
| NCT | III | Monotherapy | Advanced CRC | Prolonged OS demonstrated after pSTAT3 stratification | 2013–2016 | [ |
| NCT | I | Monotherapy | Advanced solid tumors | To evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic profile and antitumor activity of pro-drug of napabucasin, DSP-0337 | 2018–2020 | / |
| NCT | Ib/II | Combination | Advanced solid cancers | Safety and antitumor activity demonstrated with paclitaxel, particularly in gastric and GEJ adenocarcinoma | 2011–2020 | [ |
| Ib/II | Advanced gastric and GEJ adenocarcinoma | Safety and antitumor activity demonstrated with paclitaxel, regardless of prior taxane exposure | [ | |||
| Ib/II | Advanced PROC | Safety and antitumor activity demonstrated with paclitaxel, including 3 completes responses | [ | |||
| Ib/II | Advanced PDAC | Safety and antitumor activity demonstrated with paclitaxel, particularly in taxane-naïve group | [ | |||
| Ib/II | Advanced TNBC | Safety and antitumor activity demonstrated with paclitaxel, particularly in taxane-exposed therapy | [ | |||
| NCT | Ib/II | Combination | KRAS-wt mCRC | Safety and antitumor activity demonstrated with panitumumab, regardless of prior anti-EGFR exposure | 2012–2019 | [ |
| II | KRAS-wt mCRC | [ | ||||
| NCT | Ib/II | Combination | Advanced CRC | Safety and antitumor activity demonstrated with FOLFIRI ± bevacizumab | 2014–2019 | [ |
| III | Advanced CRC | Safety and antitumor activity demonstrated with FOLFIRI ± bevacizumab, regardless of prior FOLFIRI ± bevacizumab exposure and pSTAT3 status | [ | |||
| NCT | III | Combination | mPDAC | Safety and antitumor activity demonstrated with gemcitabine and nab-paclitaxel | 2014–2020 | [ |
| NCT | III | Combination | Advanced gastric and GEJ adenocarcinoma | To determine if napabucasin in combination with paclitaxel prolongs OS than paclitaxel alone | 2014–2019 | / |
| NCT | Ib/II | Combination | Advanced HCC | To evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic profile and antitumor activity in combination with sorafenib in comparison with sorafenib alone | 2014–2019 | / |
| NCT | I | Combination | Advanced HCC | To evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic profile and antitumor activity in combination with sorafenib | 2015–2019 | / |
| NCT | III | Combination | Advanced cancers | To evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic profile and antitumor activity in combination with immune checkpoint inhibitors | 2015–2019 | / |
| NCT | III | Combination | mCRC | To determine if napabucasin in combination with FOLFIRI prolongs OS than FOLFIRI alone | 2016–2020 | / |
| NCT | III | Combination | mPDAC | To determine if napabucasin in combination with nab-paclitaxel and gemcitabine prolongs OS than nab-paclitaxel and gemcitabine alone | 2016–2020 | / |
| NCT | I | Monotherapy | Advanced solid tumors | To evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic profile and antitumor activity | 2018–2020 | / |
Clinical trials of AZD9150: STAT3-targetd antisense oligonucleotide.
| NCT No. | Phase | Therapy | Cancer Types | Brief Description | Time | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT | I/II | Monotherapy | Predominantly refractory DLBCL | Safety and antitumor activity demonstrated | 2012–2016 | [ |
| NCT | II | Monotherapy | Advanced HCC | Safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics evaluated but with limited antitumor activity | 2013–2015 | [ |
| Not stated | I | Monotherapy | Advanced lymphoma and solid tumors | Safety and antitumor activity demonstrated | 2015 | [ |
| NCT | I & II | Combination | Advanced solid tumors | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity in combination with durvalumab, tremelimumab and AZD5069 | 2015–2020 | / |
| NCT | 1 | Combination | Relapsed/refractory DLBCL | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity in combination with durvalumab and tremelimumab compared with durvalumab alone | 2016–2019 | / |
| NCT | I | Combination | MIBC | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity of durvalumab in combination with AZD9150 or other novel anticancer agents compared with durvalumab alone | 2016–2020 | / |
| NCT | II | Combination | Advanced pancreatic, lung, colorectal cancer | To evaluate the antitumor activity and tumor-based biomarkers in combination with durvalumab | 2017–2021 | / |
| NCT | II | Combination | Advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity of different combinations of anticancer agents | 2017–2021 | / |
| NCT | I | Combination | Advanced solid tumors | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity in combination with durvalumab compared with AZD9150 alone | 2018–2019 | / |
| NCT | I & II | Combination | Advanced solid tumors | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity in combination with durvalumab and chemodrugs compared with AZD9150 alone; to compare its bioavailability of subcutaneous and intravenous formulations | 2018–2020 | / |
| NCT | Ib/II | Combination | mTNBC | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity of durvalumab and paclitaxel in combination with AZD9150 or other novel anticancer agents | 2018–2020 | / |
| NCT | Ib | Combination | Advanced NSCLC | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity of durvalumab in combination with AZD9150 or other novel anticancer agents +/- chemotherapy | 2018–2020 | / |
| NCT | I | Combination | Relapsed/refractory non-Hodgkin lymphoma | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity of different combinations of targeted agents | 2018–2021 | / |
Clinical trials of OPB compounds, pyrimethamine, TTI-101: STAT3 SH2 domain inhibitors.
| NCT No. | Phase | Therapy | Cancer Types | Brief Description | Time | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| NCT | I | Monotherapy | Advanced solid tumors | Unfavorable pharmacokinetic profile and antitumor activity demonstrated, leading to discontinuation of compound development | 2009–2012 | [ |
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| NCT | I | Monotherapy | Advanced solid tumors | Safety, tolerability and antitumor activity demonstrated, including one PR in DLBCL | 2012–2015 | [ |
| NCT | I | Monotherapy | Advanced HCC | Safety and tolerability demonstrated but no antitumor response was observed | 2013–2017 | [ |
| NCT | I | Monotherapy | Advanced solid tumors | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity | 2014–2019 | / |
| NCT | Ib | Monotherapy | Relapsed/refractory AML | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity | 2017–2018 | / |
| NCT | IIa | Monotherapy | NPC/refractory tumors | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity | 2017–2020 | / |
| NCT | I | Combination | AML | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity in combination with decitabine | 2017–2023 | / |
| NCT | I | Combination | Relapsed/refractory DLBCL | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and antitumor activity in combination with bendamustine and rituximab | 2019–2021 | / |
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| NCT | I | Monotherapy | Refractory solid tumors | Better tolerability for intermittent than continuous dosing; antitumor activity demonstrated, including 2 PRs in EGFR mutation-positive NSCLC prior anti-EGFR exposure | 2009–2013 | [ |
| NCT | I | Monotherapy | Advanced cancers | To evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic profile and antitumor activity | 2010–2013 | / |
| NCT | I | Monotherapy | Relapsed/refractory hematological malignancies | Safety and tolerability demonstrated but long-term administration at higher doses was difficult with daily dosing and no antitumor response was observed, leading to termination of study | 2011–2014 | [ |
| NCT | I | Monotherapy | Advanced solid tumors | To evaluate the pharmacokinetic profile in relation to pSTAT3 expression in peripheral mononuclear blood cells and single nucleotide polymorphisms in patient tissues | 2011–2015 | / |
| NCT | I | Monotherapy | Advanced NPC | Poor tolerability, leading to termination of study | 2013–2015 | [ |
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| NCT | I & II | Monotherapy | Relapsed CLL/SLL | To evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic profile and antitumor activity | 2010–2024 | / |
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| NCT | I | Monotherapy | Advanced cancers | To evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetic profile | 2017–2020 | / |