| Literature DB >> 32195193 |
Gioacchino P Marceca1, Priya Londhe2, Federica Calore2.
Abstract
Cancer cachexia (CC) is a multifactorial syndrome characterized by systemic inflammation, uncontrolled weight loss and dramatic metabolic alterations. This includes myofibrillar protein breakdown, increased lipolysis, insulin resistance, elevated energy expediture, and reduced food intake, hence impairing the patient's response to anti-cancer therapies and quality of life. While a decade ago the syndrome was considered incurable, over the most recent years much efforts have been put into the study of such disease, leading to the development of potential therapeutic strategies. Several important improvements have been reached in the management of CC from both the diagnostic-prognostic and the pharmacological viewpoint. However, given the heterogeneity of the disease, it is impossible to rely only on single variables to properly treat patients presenting this metabolic syndrome. Moreover, the cachexia symptoms are strictly dependent on the type of tumor, stage and the specific patient's response to cancer therapy. Thus, the attempt to translate experimentally effective therapies into the clinical practice results in a great challenge. For this reason, it is of crucial importance to further improve our understanding on the interplay of molecular mechanisms implicated in the onset and progression of CC, giving the opportunity to develop new effective, safe pharmacological treatments. In this review we outline the recent knowledge regarding cachexia mediators and pathways involved in skeletal muscle (SM) and adipose tissue (AT) loss, mainly from the experimental cachexia standpoint, then retracing the unimodal treatment options that have been developed to the present day.Entities:
Keywords: animal models; cachexia mediators; cancer cachexia; clinical trials; muscle tissue and adipose tissue loss; therapeutic strategies
Year: 2020 PMID: 32195193 PMCID: PMC7064558 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2020.00298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Notorious molecular mechanisms underlying skeletal muscle wasting during cancer cachexia. Atrophy of skeletal muscle in cancer cachexia is due to aberrant activation of specific signaling pathways, consequent to the binding of factors secreted by the tumor, the stroma or the immune system to their cognate receptors. Most of such signaling pathways converge toward activation of selective transcription factors, causing their nuclear translocation and binding to promoters of cachexigenic genes. These include genes encoding cytokines [e.g., tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) and interleukin 6 (IL-6)], inflammation-related receptors [e.g., toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) and TLR7], myokines [e.g., myostatin (Mstn)], muscle-specific E3 ubiquitin ligases and autophagy-related proteins. Such events potentiate inflammatory processes at the local level and cause the breakdown of myofibrillar proteins, impairing the contractile function of skeletal muscles. Several cachexia-inducing factors are known to exert their cachectigenic effect by acting synergistically, as in the case of TNFα and interferon gamma (INFγ). To the contrary, downregulation occurring in the insulin (Ins) and insulin growth-like factor (IGF) signaling determines a decrease in mTOR-dependent protein synthesis, due to upstream downregulation of RAC serine/threonine-protein kinase (AKT) activity. In normal conditions, AKT functions also as a negative regulator of forkhead box protein O1 (FoxO1) and FoxO3 transcription factors, preventing their nuclear translocation. Thus, consequent to AKT downregulation under cachectic conditions, both these FoxOs localize into the myonucleus and induce transcription of autophagy components and muscle-specific E3 ubiquitin ligases. Peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptor-gamma co-activator 1-alpha (PGC1α), overexpressed during cancer cachexia, is known to inhibit FoxO3 binding to the DNA and cause enhance expression of genes involved in energy metabolism and mitochondrial biogenesis. Upregulated nodes are colored in pink and connected with other nodes through continuous edges. Downregulated nodes are colored in azure and connected with other nodes through dash-dot edges. Dashed edges represent connections between transcriptional/co-transcriptional factors and gene expression. ActA, activin A; ActIIR, activin type 2 receptor; ALK4, activin receptor type-1B; C/EBP, CCAAT/enhancer binding protein; c-Jun, proto-oncogene c-Jun; Gp130, glycoprotein 130; Hsp, heat shock protein; IL-1a, interleukin 1 alpha; IL-1R1, interleukin 1 receptor 1; IL-6R, IL-6 receptor; INFGR, INFγ receptor; JAK, Janus kinase; JNK, c-Jun N-terminal kinase; LIF, leukemia inhibitory factor; LIFR, LIF receptor; miR, microRNA; mTORC1, mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1; MyD88, myeloid differentiation factor 88; NF-kB, nuclear transcription factor kappa B; p38, p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase; PI3K, Phosphoinositide 3-kinase; SMAD, small mother against decapentaplegic; STAT3, signal transducer and activator of transcription 3; sXBP1, spliced isoform X-box-binding protein 1; TNFR, tumor necrosis factor receptor; TNFRSF12A, TNF Receptor Superfamily Member 12A; TSC2, tuberous sclerosis complex 2; TWEAK, TNF-related weak inducer of apoptosis; UCP, uncoupling protein.
Figure 2Molecular mechanisms driving adipose tissue loss and remodeling during cancer cachexia. Similarly to the case of skeletal muscle wasting, the combination of abnormally activated pathways including β-adrenergic signaling, cytokine- and toll-like receptor (TLR)-mediated inflammation, and parathyroid-related peptide (PTHrP) stimulation, leads to enhanced lipolysis and thermogenesis of the AT in cancer cachexia. In particular, binding of interleukin-6 (IL-6) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) to their respective membrane receptors induce high phosphorylation levels of enzymes involved in catabolism of triglycerides, i.e., adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) and hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL), implying higher rates of their enzyme activity. Interaction between zinc-α2-glycoprotein (ZAG) and beta-3 adrenergic receptor is known to induce even stronger lipolytic effects than those mediated by IL-6 and TNFα, partly due to induction of expression of lipolytic genes (including G proteins of the type Gαs) and suppression of expression of Gαs, an inhibitor of β-adrenergic signaling. Moreover, ZAG promotes phosphorylation of perilipin-1, which results in wider exposition of lipid droplets to the catabolic action of ATGL, HSL, and monoglyceride lipase (MGL). A role in enhanced lipolysis during cancer cachexia has been demonstrated also for TLR4, although precise mechanisms remained largely elusive. Meanwhile, such pattern recognition receptor seems to exert an important role during cachexia-driven white adipose tissue browning, along with IL-6 and PTHrP, promoting expression of thermogenic genes, such as uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1), and favoring mitochondrial biogenesis. In the present illustration, the process of browning proceeds from the left to the right side of the figure, with the left side presenting bigger lipid droplets and almost mitochondria, while the right side presenting a large number of small, sparse lipid droplets and mitochondria. Upregulated nodes are colored in pink and connected with other nodes through continuous edges. Non-deregulated nodes are represented as semi-transparent nodes. Dashed edges represent connections between transcriptional/co-transcriptional factors and gene expression. ADCY, adenylate cyclases; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; cAMP, cyclic adenosine monophosphate; DAG, diglyceride; FA, fatty acid; gp130, glycoprotein-130 IL-6R, IL-6 receptor; JAK, Janus kinase; MAG, monoglyceride; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; PTHR, parathyroid receptor; STAT, signal transducer and activator of transcription; TAG, triglyceride; TNFR, tumor necrosis factor receptor.
Table summarizing unimodal treatment options mentioned in this review.
| Etanercept | Anti-TNFα therapy | TNFα receptor-blocker | Cancer (other than brain cancer) | Phase III RCT (placebo) | – | Induced negligible weight gain; did not improve median survival; caused higher rates of neurotoxicity. | NCT00046904 ( |
| Thalidomide | Anti-TNFα therapy | Synthetic derivative of glutamic acid | Pancreatic cancer | RCT (placebo) | Attenuated weight and lean body mass losses | No significant improvements of QoL | ( |
| Thalidomide | Anti-TNFα therapy | Synthetic derivative of glutamic acid | Cancer | Phase III RCT | Significant decrease in levels of circulating IL-6; did not cause worsening of life | Lack of satisfactory documentation | ( |
| Thalidomide | Anti-TNFα therapy | Synthetic derivative of glutamic acid | Cancer | RCT (placebo) | Slight decrease in levels of circulating IL-6 and TNFα | No significant benefits compared with placebo; possible risk of treatment-related mortality | ( |
| Pentoxifylline | Anti-TNFα therapy | Methylxanthine derivative | Cancer (other than brain cancer) | RCT (placebo) | – | No differences in QoL and possible worsening of life after 4 weeks of treatment | ( |
| Pentoxifylline | Anti-TNFα therapy | Methylxanthine derivative | Cancer | RCT (placebo) | No toxicity | Did not improve appetite nor significant weight gain | ( |
| Infliximab | Anti-TNFα therapy | Chimeric IgG1k monoclonal antibody | NSCLC | Phase III RCT (placebo)/ docetaxel | – | Did not induced weight gaining; caused increased fatigue and inferior global QoL | NCT00040885 ( |
| Clazakizumab | Anti-IL6 therapy | Humanized anti-IL-6 monoclonal antibody | Cancer | Phase I CT | No apparent toxicity; increased hemoglobin and albumin levels; reduced fatigue | Lack of satisfactory documentation | ( |
| Clazakizumab | Anti-IL6 therapy | Humanized anti-IL-6 monoclonal antibody | NSCLC | Phase II RCT | Generally well tolerated; improved the lung symptom score; attenuated lean mass loss; reversed fatigue | May cause rectal hemorrhage or treatment-related mortality in a minority of patients; inconclusive in terms of clinical management | NCT00866970 ( |
| Selumetinib | Anti-IL6 therapy | MEK1/2 inhibitor | Biliary cancer | Phase II CT | Overall acceptable tolerability; induced significant weight gaining | Induced low-grade adverse events including rush and xerostomia; may worsen fatigue in a minority of patients | NCT00553332 ( |
| Selumetinib | Anti-IL6 therapy | MEK1/2 inhibitor | Cholangiocarcinoma | Phase II CT | Induced significant gaining of lean body mass | Lack of satisfactory documentation | ( |
| Ruxolitinib | Anti-IL6 therapy | JAK1/2 inhibitor | Cancer | Phase II CT | – | The study was terminated due to poor recruiting | NCT02072057 |
| Xilonix | Anti-IL-1α therapy | IL-1α-specific humanized monoclonal antibody | Cancer | Phase I CT | Well tolerated by all participants, no dose-limiting toxicities were reported | Caused proteinuria, anemia, nausea and fatigue in a minor fraction of patients | NCT01021072 ( |
| Xilonix | Anti-IL-1α therapy | IL-1α-specific humanized monoclonal antibody | CRC | Phase III RCT (placebo) | Prevented alteration of body composition and improved control of thrombocytosis | Caused proteinuria, anemia, increased concentration of alkaline phosphatase and aspartate aminotransferase and fatigue in a minor fraction of patients | NCT01767857 ( |
| Xilonix | Anti-IL-1α therapy | IL-1α-specific humanized monoclonal antibody | CRC | Phase III CT | – | The study was stopped as it crossed the prospective futility boundary of primary endpoint | NCT01767857 |
| Celecoxib | NSAID | Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor | Cancer | Phase II RCT (placebo) | Significantly improved BMI and QoL; moderate decrease of IL-6 levels after 3 weeks of treatment | – | ( |
| Celecoxib | NSAID | Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor | Cancer | Phase II CT | Significantly improved BMI and QoL; moderate decrease of TNFα levels; increased handgrip strength and improved performance status | – | ( |
| LY2495655 | Mstn inhibition | Monoclonal antibody to Mstn | ( | ( | Well tolerated; no dose-limiting toxicities were reported; increase in thigh muscle volume; consistent increases in handgrip strength observed at doses ≥21 mg; improvement in functional measures | No clear trend in dose-dependent efficacy | NCT01524224 ( |
| LY2495655 | Mstn inhibition | Monoclonal antibody to Mstn | Pancreatic cancer | Phase II RCT (placebo) + standard chemotherapy | – | No significant improvements in muscle volume; pre-cachectic patients were more responsive than cachectic patients; trend toward poorer overall survival in treated patients vs. placebo | NCT01505530 ( |
| Bimagrumab | Mstn inhibition | Human monoclonal anti-ActRII antibody | NSCLC and Pancreatic adenocarcinoma | Phase II RCT (placebo) | Significant increase in lean body mass and thigh muscle volume | Significant decrease in total body weight | NCT01433263 |
| AMG 745 | Mstn inhibition | Fc fusion peptibody | Prostate cancer | Phase I RCT (placebo) | Generally well tolerated; increased lean body mass | Slight decrease in fat mass; may cause adverse events including diarrhea and fatigue | NCT00975104 ( |
| Megestrol acetate (FDA approved) | Appetite stimulant | Progesteron derivative | Several cancer types | Summary of 35 CT | Improvement of appetite and increased caloric intake, weight gain and nutritional status; improvement of QoL; downregulation of proinflammatory cytokines or that of their cognate receptors | More than 40 side effects including edema, thromboembolitic episodes and treatment-related death | Summary of 35 clinical trials ( |
| Medroxyp rogesterone acetate (FDA approved) | Appetite stimulant | Progesteron derivative | Several cancer types | Summary of most relevant CT | Improved anorexia and QoL parameters; impaired synthesis and release of IL-6, IL-1, and TNFα | Weight gain was due to increased body fat mass rather than lean body mass | Summary of most relevant clinical trials ( |
| Ghrelin | Orexigenic mediator | Hormone | Esophageal cancer | Phase II RCT (placebo) + cisplatin-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy | Increased food consumption and weight gain; reduced nausea and anorexia related to chemotherapy | – | ( |
| Anamorelin HCl | Orexigenic mediator | Ghrelin Receptor agonist | NSCLC | Phase III | Generally well tolerated; improved appetite; increased food intake, body weight and lean body mass | Caused hyperglycemia, nausea and gastrointestinal disorders in a minority of patients; no significant improvement of handgrip strength | NCT01387269 ( |
| Anamorelin HCl | Orexigenic mediator | Ghrelin Receptor agonist | NSCLC | Phase III | Generally well tolerated; improved appetite; increased food intake, body weight and lean body mass | Caused hyperglycemia, nausea and gastrointestinal disorders in a minority of patients; no significant improvement of handgrip strength | NCT01387282 ( |
| Anamorelin HCl | Orexigenic mediator | Ghrelin Receptor agonist | NSCLC | Phase III | Generally well tolerated; improved appetite; increased food intake, body weight and lean body mass | Caused hyperglycemia, nausea and gastrointestinal disorders in a minority of patients; no significant improvement of handgrip strength | NCT01395914 ( |
| THC | Appetite stimulant and metabolism modulator | Endogenous agonist of CB1 and CB2 receptors | Cancer | Phase III CT | Well tolerated, no adverse effects | No significant improvements in appetite or QoL | ( |
| THC | Appetite stimulant and metabolism modulator | Endogenous agonist of CB1 and CB2 receptors | Cancer | Phase III CT | Well tolerated, no adverse effects; significant increase in appetite and caloric intake; improved chemosensory perception and QoL | – | NCT00316563 ( |
| THC | Appetite stimulant and metabolism modulator | Endogenous agonist of CB1 and CB2 receptors | Cancer | Pilot study | Well tolerated; significant increase in appetite and caloric intake; improved QoL; reversed fatigue | May induce dizziness or anxiety in a small fraction of patients | NCT02359123 ( |
| Nabilone | Appetite stimulant and metabolism modulator | Synthetic analog of THC | NSCLC | Phase II RCT (placebo) | Increased appetite and caloric intake; improvement of QoL; attenuated pain and insomnia | – | NCT02802540 ( |
| Erythropoietin | Anemia reversal | Hormone | Cancer | Randomized study | Reversed anemia; improved exercise ability and sense of well-being | No significant improvements in QoL; discrepancies between objective and subjective self-reported measures | ( |
CT, clinical trial; RCT, randomized clinical trial.
Table summarizing emergent unimodal treatment options for CC recently tested in preclinical studies.
| anti-PTHrP | PTHrP inhibitor | Monoclonal neutralizing antibody against PTHrP | LLC murine model | Preclinical study | Prevented weight loss, AT browning and preserved lean body mass; improved physical activity; suppressed thermogenic gene expression | – | ( |
| Etoxomir | Fatty acid oxidation blocker | Carnitine palmitoyltransferase-1-selective inhibitor | Stable murine models of human cancer-induced CC (by injection) | Preclinical study | Rescued muscle mass and body weight of cachectic mice | – | ( |
| Metformin | Inhibitor of complex I of the electron transport chain | Biguanide compound | Murine burn model | Preclinical study | Prevented WAT browning by increasing PP2A activity | – | ( |
| Fenofibrate | PPARα agonist | Fibric acid derivative | GEM model of NSCLC | Preclinical study | Prevented loss of SM mass and body weight; reduced glucocorticoid levels in mice serum | – | ( |
| AR-42 | Epigenetic modulator of gene expression | I/IIB HDAC inhibitor | LLC and C26 murine model | Preclinical study | Preserved muscle and fat mass; prolonged survival, reduced splenomegaly, reduced levels of Atrogin-1, MuRF1 and pro-inflammatory cytokines | The treatment showed distinct efficacy between the two models of CC | ( |
| Atorvastatin | TLR inhibitor | HMG-CoA reductase enzyme inhibitor | LLC murine model | Preclinical study | Increased body weight; decreased tumor mass; attenuated AT remodeling; decreased levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines; prolonged survival | – | ( |
| IMO-8503 | TLR inhibitor | Immune modulatory oligonucleotide | LLC murine model | Preclinical study | Attenuated loss of lean mass; decreased levels of Pax7; prevented caspase-3 and PARP cleavage in SM | Caused toxic effects when administered at a concentration ≥ 15 mmol/L | ( |
| Resiquimod (R848) | Topical TLR7/8 agonist | Imidazoquinoline compound | KPC-derived PDA syngeneic murine model | Preclinical study | Impaired expression of PD-1 on T cells; enhancement of CD8+ T-cell cytotoxic response; decreased tumor burden and to improvement of CC features | Initial or prolonged hypophagia and weight loss; may cause initial treatment-related decreases in locomotion | ( |