| Literature DB >> 32653773 |
Lucas Moreno1, Giuseppe Barone2, Steven G DuBois3, Jan Molenaar4, Matthias Fischer5, Johannes Schulte6, Angelika Eggert7, Gudrun Schleiermacher8, Frank Speleman9, Louis Chesler10, Birgit Geoerger11, Michael D Hogarty12, Meredith S Irwin13, Nick Bird14, Guy B Blanchard15, Sean Buckland16, Hubert Caron17, Susan Davis18, Bram De Wilde9, Hedwig E Deubzer19, Emmy Dolman20, Martin Eilers21, Rani E George3, Sally George10, Štěrba Jaroslav22, John M Maris12, Lynley Marshall10, Melinda Merchant23, Peter Mortimer23, Cormac Owens24, Anna Philpott25, Evon Poon26, Jerry W Shay27, Roberto Tonelli28, Dominique Valteau-Couanet11, Gilles Vassal29, Julie R Park30, Andrew D J Pearson10.
Abstract
Only one class of targeted agents (anti-GD2 antibodies) has been incorporated into front-line therapy for neuroblastoma since the 1980s. The Neuroblastoma New Drug Development Strategy (NDDS) initiative commenced in 2012 to accelerate the development of new drugs for neuroblastoma. Advances have occurred, with eight of nine high-priority targets being evaluated in paediatric trials including anaplastic lymphoma kinase inhibitors being investigated in front-line, but significant challenges remain. This article reports the conclusions of the second NDDS forum, which expanded across the Atlantic to further develop the initiative. Pre-clinical and clinical data for 40 genetic targets and mechanisms of action were prioritised and drugs were identified for early-phase trials. Strategies to develop drugs targeting TERT, telomere maintenance, ATRX, alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT), BRIP1 and RRM2 as well as direct targeting of MYCN are high priority and should be championed for drug discovery. Promising pre-clinical data suggest that targeting of ALT by ATM or PARP inhibition may be potential strategies. Drugs targeting CDK2/9, CDK7, ATR and telomere maintenance should enter paediatric clinical development rapidly. Optimising the response to anti-GD2 by combinations with chemotherapy, targeted agents and other immunological targets are crucial. Delivering this strategy in the face of small patient cohorts, genomically defined subpopulations and a large number of permutations of combination trials, demands even greater international collaboration. In conclusion, the NDDS provides an internationally agreed, biologically driven selection of prioritised genetic targets and drugs. Improvements in the strategy for conducting trials in neuroblastoma will accelerate bringing these new drugs more rapidly to front-line therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical trials; Drug development; Epigenetics; MYCN; Neuroblastoma; Phase I; Preclinical testing
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32653773 DOI: 10.1016/j.ejca.2020.05.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Cancer ISSN: 0959-8049 Impact factor: 10.002