| Literature DB >> 32331425 |
Roberto Corchado-Cobos1,2, Natalia García-Sancha1,2, Rogelio González-Sarmiento2,3, Jesús Pérez-Losada1,2, Javier Cañueto1,2,4.
Abstract
Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC) is the second most frequent cancer in humans and its incidence continues to rise. Although CSCC usually display a benign clinical behavior, it can be both locally invasive and metastatic. The signaling pathways involved in CSCC development have given rise to targetable molecules in recent decades. In addition, the high mutational burden and increased risk of CSCC in patients under immunosuppression were part of the rationale for developing the immunotherapy for CSCC that has changed the therapeutic landscape. This review focuses on the molecular basis of CSCC and the current biology-based approaches of targeted therapies and immune checkpoint inhibitors. Another purpose of this review is to explore the landscape of drugs that may induce or contribute to the development of CSCC. Beginning with the pathogenetic basis of these drug-induced CSCCs, we move on to consider potential therapeutic opportunities for overcoming this adverse effect.Entities:
Keywords: BRAF inhibitors; azathioprine; cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma; cyclosporine; epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitors; immunotherapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32331425 PMCID: PMC7216042 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21082956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Clinical trials of targeted therapies in cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC) (revised until 29 January 2020).
| Drug | Treatment | Conditions | Current State | NCT Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Alone | Locally advanced and | Completed (28% response rate, 6% | NCT00240682 |
| Alone | Locally advanced and | Completed | NCT03325738 | |
| Alone (neoadjuvant therapy) | Aggressive locally advanced CSCC | Recruiting | NCT02324608 | |
| Combination with post-operative | Locally advanced head and neck CSCC | Active, not recruiting | NCT01979211 | |
| Combination with pembrolizumab | Recurrent/metastatic CSCC | Recruiting | NCT03082534 | |
| Combination with | Advanced CSCC | Recruiting | NCT03524326 | |
| Combination with | Advanced CSCC | Recruiting | NCT03944941 | |
|
| Alone (neoadjuvant therapy) | Locally advanced/recurrent CSCC | Completed (45.5% response rate) | NCT00126555 |
| Alone | Metastatic or locorregional | Completed (16% response rate) | NCT00054691 | |
|
| Alone | Recurrent/metastatic CSCC | Completed (10% response rate) | NCT01198028 |
| Combination with | Advanced head and neck | Completed | NCT00369512 | |
| Alone (before surgery) | Head and neck CSCC | Active, not recruiting | NCT00954226 | |
|
| Combination with | CSCC | Recruiting | NCT03108131 |
Clinical trials of immunotherapy in cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (revised until 29 January 2020).
| Drug | Treatment | Conditions | Current State | NCT Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Alone | Advanced and metastatic CSCC | Completed (47%–50% response rate) Recruiting next phase | NCT02383212 NCT02760498 |
| Alone (before surgery) | Recurrent stage III-IV head and neck CSCC | Recruiting | NCT03565783 | |
| Alone (pre-operative | Recurrent CSCC | Recruiting | NCT03889912 | |
| Adjuvant therapy | High risk CSCC | Recruiting | NCT03969004 | |
| Alone or | Advanced or metastatic CSCC | Recruiting | NCT04050436 | |
| Alone | Unresectable locally | Recruiting | NCT04242173 | |
| Alone (neoadjuvant therapy) | Stage II to IV CSCC | Recruiting | NCT04154943 | |
|
| Alone | Recurrent/metastatic or locally advanced | Active, not recruiting | NCT03284424 |
| Alone | Locally advanced or metastatic CSCC | Active, not recruiting (preview results presented in ASCO show 42% | NCT02883556 | |
| Alone | Locally advanced and | Active, not recruiting | NCT02964559 | |
| Adjuvant therapy after surgery and | High risk locally advanced CSCC | Recruiting | NCT03833167 | |
| Combination with | CSCC of head and neck | Recruiting | NCT03057613 | |
| Combination with | Recurrent/metastatic | Recruiting | NCT03082534 | |
| Combination with | Advanced/metastatic | Recruiting | NCT03684785 | |
| Combination with | Stage III-IV CSCC of head | Recruiting | NCT03590054 | |
| Combination with | Stage IV CSCC of head | Not yet recruiting | NCT04007744 | |
| Combination with | Stage III-IV CSCC of head and neck | Recruiting | NCT02955290 | |
| Combination with | Advanced/metastatic | Recruiting | NCT04234113 | |
|
| Alone | Locally advanced/metastatic | Recruiting | NCT04204837 |
| Alone | Advanced CSCC | Recruiting | NCT03834233 | |
| Alone or combination with ipilimumab | Metastatic CSCC in | Recruiting | NCT03816332 | |
| Combination with pembrolizumab and CIMAvax vaccine | Stage III-IV CSCC of head and neck | Recruiting | NCT02955290 |
Figure 1Therapeutic landscape of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma.
Pharmacologically-induced CSCC.
| Drug | Treatment | Mechanisms to Promote CSCC | Options to Reduce CSCC Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cyclosporine | Immunosuppressant | Reduces UVB-induced DNA damage repair and inhibits apoptosis by inhibiting nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT) [ | Sirolimus and everolimus [ |
| Induces the expression of ATF3, which downregulates p53 and increases CSCC formation [ | |||
| Enhances AKT activation by suppressing PTEN and promotes tumor growth [ | |||
| Enhances epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition involving the upregulation of TGFβ signaling [ | |||
| Azathioprine | Immunosuppressant | Photosensitizes the skin to ultraviolet radiation (UVR) by changing the absorption interval of DNA upon incorporation of 6-thioguanine and induces the formation of reactive oxygen species [ | Mycophenolate mofetil [ |
| Voriconazole | Antifungal | The primary metabolite, voriconazole N-oxide, absorbs UVA and UVB wavelengths and causes photosensitivity [ | Photoprotection |
| Inhibits terminal epithelial differentiation pathways resulting in poor formation of epithelial layers that are important for photoprotection [ | |||
| Inhibits catalase, raising intracellular levels of UV-associated oxidative stress and DNA damage [ | |||
| Vismodegib (Sonic-hedgehog inhibitor) | Basal cell carcinoma | Activates RAS-MAPK pathway [ | Close follow-up |
| Vemurafenib and dabrafenib (BRAF inhibitors) | Melanoma | Activate, paradoxically, MAPK pathway and induce | BRAF inhibitors + MEK inhibitors [ |