| Literature DB >> 32626653 |
Felix Oppel1, Martin Görner2, Holger Sudhoff1.
Abstract
Tumors may consist of billions of cells, which in malignant cases disseminate and form distant metastases. The large number of tumor cells formed by the high number of cell divisions during tumor progression creates a heterogeneous set of genetically diverse tumor cell clones. For cancer therapy this poses unique challenges, as distinct clones have to be targeted in different tissue locations. Recent research has led to the development of specific inhibitors of defined targets in cellular signaling cascades which promise more effective and more tumor-specific therapy approaches. Many of these molecular targeted therapy (MTT) compounds have already been translated into clinics or are currently being tested in clinical studies. However, the outgrowth of tumor cell clones resistant to such inhibitors is a drawback that affects specific inhibitors in a similar way as classical cytotoxic chemotherapeutics, because additionally acquired genetic alterations can enable tumor cells to circumvent the particular regulators of cellular signaling being targeted. Thus, it might be desirable to reduce genetic heterogeneity prior to molecular targeting, which could reduce the statistical chance of tumor relapse initiated by resistant clones. One way to achieve this is employing unspecific methods to remove as much tumor material as possible before MTT, e.g., by tumor debulking (TD). Currently, this is successfully applied in the clinical treatment of ovarian cancer. We believe that TD followed by treatment with a combination of molecular targeted drugs, optimally guided by biomarkers, might advance survival of patients suffering from various cancer types.Entities:
Keywords: cancer genetics; cancer therapy; clonal heterogeneity; molecular targeting; precision oncology; therapy resistance
Year: 2020 PMID: 32626653 PMCID: PMC7314947 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2020.00801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Clonal evolution leads to acquired combined drug resistance. As the tumor grows over time, new genetic alterations lead to the formation of distinct clones (indicated by distinct colors), each representing a subpopulation of the tumor mass. Clones vary in their topology within the tumor and their biology, ultimately leading to the formation of metastatic clones which initiate metastases at different locations. Moreover, new genetic hits lead to drug resistance against single drugs. As the tumor disease progresses, further individual clones can acquire a combined resistance against several drugs. As the genetic diversity statistically correlates with tumor volume, larger metastases (Top Right) are genetically more diverse than smaller metastases (Left Right). Within metastases the clonal evolution continues from the metastatic clone of the primary tumor, leading to a higher mutational burden.
Figure 2Example for surgery to reduce clonal heterogeneity synergizes with subsequent combined molecular targeting. A tumor body consists of a genetically heterogeneous set of tumor cell clones with a differential drug resistance spectrum. Upon partial removal of the tumor body, the number of tumor cell clones is reduced, so that a combined treatment with drugs A and B can eliminate the remaining tumor cells. This demonstrates how TD can facilitate subsequent molecular targeting even when residual tumor tissue remains.