| Literature DB >> 32357912 |
Qi Du1, Xiang Guo2, Miao Wang1, Yongfu Li1, Xiaoyi Sun3, Qin Li4.
Abstract
Cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 (CDK4/6) inhibitors, which block the transition from the G1 to S phase of the cell cycle by interfering with Rb phosphorylation and E2F release, have shown potent antitumor activity and manageable toxicity in HR+/HER2- breast cancer patients. Some clinical trials involving CDK4/6 inhibitors in other tumors have achieved preliminary impressive efficacy. Whether CDK4/6 inhibitors possess great potential as broad-spectrum antitumor drugs and how to maximize their clinical benefits remain uncertain. TCGA database analysis showed that CDK4/6 genes and related genes are widely expressed among various tumors, and high or moderate expression of CDK4/6 genes commonly indicates poor survival. CDK4/6 gene expression is significantly higher in COAD, ESCA, STAD, LIHC, and HNSC, suggesting that CDK4/6 inhibitors could be more efficacious in those tumors. Moreover, network analysis with the STRING database demonstrated that CDK4/6-related proteins were co-expressed or co-occurred with the classical tumor signaling pathways, such as the cell cycle pathway, RAS pathway, PI3K pathway, Myc pathway, and p53 pathway. The extensive antitumor effects of CDK4/6 inhibitors may be achieved by synergizing or antagonizing with other signaling molecule inhibitors, and combination therapy might be the most effective treatment strategy. This article analyzed the feasibility of expanding the application of CDK4/6 inhibitors at the genetic level and further summarized the associated clinical/preclinical studies to collect supportive evidence. This is the first study that presents a theoretical foundation for CDK4/6 inhibitor precision therapy via combined analysis of comprehensive gene information and clinical research results.Entities:
Keywords: CDK4/6 inhibitors; Cell cycle; Malignancy; TCGA database; Tumor signaling pathway
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32357912 PMCID: PMC7195725 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-020-00880-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1The role of CDK4/6 in the cell cycle
Fig. 2CDK4/6-related gene information among various cancers. a Expression of CDK4/6 and related genes. b Comparison of the expression of CDK4/6-related genes between tumor and normal tissues. c Alteration frequency of CDK4/6-related genes
Fig. 3Expression levels of CDK4/6-related genes and its corresponding survival
Clinical trials of CDK4/6 inhibitors in breast cancer
| CDK inhibitors | Study ID | Phase | Lines | Patients | Regimens | Efficacy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Palbociclib | PALOMA-1 [25] | II | First-line | HR+/HER2− ABC | Palbociclib + letrozole ( | mPFS 20.2 m vs 10.2 m, HR 0.488, 95% CI 0.319–0.748, |
| PALOMA-2 [36] | III | First-line | HR+/HER2− ABC | Palbociclib + letrozole ( | mPFS 24.8 m vs 14.5 m, HR 0.58, 95% CI 0.46–0.72, | |
| PALOMA-3 [30] | III | First/second-line | HR+/HER2− ABC with previous ET | Palbociclib + fluvastatin ( | mOS 34.9 m vs 28.0 m, HR 0.81, 95% CI 0.64–1.03, | |
| NCT01684215 [ | II | First-line | Postmenopausal Japanese patients with HR+/HER2− ABC | Palbociclib + letrozole ( | PFS at 1 year 75.0%, mPFS NR, ORR 40.5%, DCR 85.75% | |
| NCT02592746 (active, not recruiting) | II | First/second/third-line | Premenopausal Women With HR+ MBC | Palbociclib + exemestane + leuprolide acetate/capecitabine ( | mPFS 9.2 m vs 3.8 m, | |
| Ribociclib | MONALEESA-2 [38] | III | First-line | Postmenopausal women with HR+/HER2− ABC | Ribociclib + letrozole ( | mPFS NR vs 14.7 m, HR 0.56, 95% CI 0.43–0.72, |
| MONALEESA-3 [39] | III | First/second-line | HR+/HER2− ABC | Ribociclib + fulvestrant ( | mPFS 20.5 m vs 12.8 m, HR 0.59, 95% CI 0.48–0.73, | |
| MONALEESA-7 [40] | III | First/second-line | Premenopausal women with HR+/HER2− ABC | Ribociclib + ET ( | mPFS 23.8 m vs 13.0 m, HR 0.55, 95% CI 0.44–0.69, | |
TRINITI-1 NCT02732119 (active, not recruiting) | I/II | Non-first line | Patients with HR+/HER2− ABC | Ribociclib + everolimus + exemestane ( | mPFS 5.7 m, ORR 8.4% | |
| Abemaciclib | MONARCH-1 [35] | II | Non-first line | Refractory HR+/HER2− ABC | Abemaciclib ( | ORR 19.7%, clinical benefit rate (CR + PR + SD ≥ 6.0 m) 42.4%, mPFS 6.0 m, mOS 17.7 m |
| MONARCH-2 [31] | III | Non-first line | HR+/HER2− ABC | Abemaciclib + fulvestrant ( | mPFS 16.4 m vs 9.3 m, HR 0.55, 95% CI 0.45–0.68, | |
| MONARCH 3 [33] | III | First-line | Postmenopausal women with HR+/HER2− ABC | Abemaciclib + nonsteroidal AI ( | mPFS NR vs 14.7 m, HR 0.54, 95% CI 0.41–0.72, |
ABC advanced breast cancer, MBC metastatic breast cancer, ET endocrine therapy, AI aromatase inhibitor, NR not reached, PFS progression-free survival, OS overall survival, ORR objective response rate, DCR disease control rate, HR hazard ratio
Clinical trials of CDK4/6 inhibitors in other tumors
| CDK inhibitors | Study ID | Phase | Lines | Patients | Regimens | Efficacy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Palbociclib | NCT01209598 [ | II | Non-first line | Advanced WD/DDLS | Palbociclib ( | PFS at 12 weeks 57.2%; mPFS 17.9 weeks |
| NCT02101034 [ | II | Non-first line | HNSCCs | Palbociclib + cetuximab ( | ORR 39% (in platinum-resistant patients), ORR 19% (in cetuximab-resistant patients) | |
| NCT01037790 (recruiting) | II | UK | RB/germ cell tumors | Palbociclib ( | PFS at 6 months 28%; mPFS 11 weeks | |
| NCT01536743 (active, not recruiting) | II | Non-first line | Ovarian epithelial carcinoma | Palbociclib ( | PFS at 6 months 15% | |
| NCT00420056 [ | Ib | UK | MCL | Palbociclib ( | 6% CR, 12% PR, 41% SD, mPFS 4.0 m | |
| Ribociclib | CLEE011X2105 [ | Ib/II | Non-first line | BRAF V600-mutant melanoma | Ribociclib ( | 2 PR, 6 SD |
| CMEK162X2114 [ | Ib/II | UK | NRAS-mutant melanoma | Ribociclib + binimetinib ( | 7 PR, 11 SD, 33% had 20–30% tumor shrinkage | |
| Abemaciclib | NCT01394016 [ | I | UK | Breast cancer; NSCLC; Melanoma; Glioblastoma; CRC | Abemaciclib ( | Breast cancer ( |
| NCT02014129 [ | I | Non-first line | Various advanced cancer | Abemaciclib ( | tumor size changed from 35% decrease to 25% increase, > 30% tumor shrinkage in 2 patients |
WD/DDLS well-differentiated or dedifferentiated liposarcoma, HNSCCs head and neck squamous-cell carcinomas, Rb retinoblastoma, MCL mantle cell lymphoma, NSCLC non-small-cell lung cancer, CRC colorectal cancer, UK unknown, PFS progression-free survival, OS overall survival, ORR objective response rate, DCR disease control rate, CR complete response, PR partial response, SD stable disease, HR hazard ratio
Fig. 4Functional protein association networks of CDK4/6 and classical tumor signaling pathways
Factors contributing to resistance to CDK4/6 inhibitors.
| Resistance type | Resistance mechanism |
|---|---|
| Cyclin-CDK complex increase | |
| Cyclin D-CDK4/6-Rb pathway regulation | |
| Others |