| Literature DB >> 32933570 |
Yilan Yang1,2, Jurui Luo1,2, Xingxing Chen1,2, Zhaozhi Yang1,2, Xin Mei1,2, Jinli Ma1,2, Zhen Zhang1,2, Xiaomao Guo3,4, Xiaoli Yu5,6.
Abstract
Recently, the focus of enhancing tumor radiosensitivity has shifted from chemotherapeutics to targeted therapies. Cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and 6 (CDK4/6) inhibitors are a novel class of selective cell cycle therapeutics that target the cyclin D-CDK4/6 complex and induce G1 phase arrest. These agents have demonstrated favorable effects when used as monotherapy or combined with endocrine therapy and targeted inhibitors, stimulating further explorations of other combination strategies. Multiple preclinical studies have indicated that CDK4/6 inhibitors exhibit a synergistic effect with radiotherapy both in vitro and in vivo. The principal mechanisms of radiosensitization effects include inhibition of DNA damage repair, enhancement of apoptosis, and blockade of cell cycle progression, which provide the rationale for clinical use. CDK4/6 inhibitors also induce cellular senescence and promote anti-tumor immunity, which might represent potential mechanisms for radiosensitization. Several small sample clinical studies have preliminarily indicated that the combination of CDK4/6 inhibitors and radiotherapy exhibited well-tolerated toxicity and promising efficacy. However, most clinical trials in combined therapy remain in the recruitment stage. Further work is required to seek optimal radiotherapy-drug combinations. In this review, we describe the effects and underlying mechanisms of CDK4/6 inhibitors as a radiosensitizer and discuss previous clinical studies to evaluate the prospects and challenges of this combination.Entities:
Keywords: CDK4/6 inhibitor; Radiosensitivity; Radiotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32933570 PMCID: PMC7490904 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-020-01693-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1Physiological functions and regulation of the cyclin D-CDK4/6 complex. Cyclin D-CDK4/6 complex facilitates G1-S transition. In the early G1 phase, mitogenic signals stimulate the accumulation of D-type cyclins and induce the formation of the cyclin D-CDK4/6 complex, which phosphorylates RB. Once hypophosphorylated, RB is prepared for hyperphosphorylation by the increased levels of the cyclin E-CDK2 complex. The transcription factor E2F is released from the RB-E2F complex due to the lack of the inhibitory effects of RB, enabling cells to proceed into S phase. Cyclin D-CDK4/6 activity is also regulated by mTORC1 and Ink4 family proteins. The PI3K and RAS pathway phosphorylate TSC2 to enhance mTORC1 activity, thus increasing cyclin D1 levels. Conversely, Ink4 family proteins inactivate the kinase to block cell cycle progression
Fig. 2Specific targets of CDK4/6 inhibitors. CDK4/6 inhibitors specifically bind to CDK4/6, thus inducing G1 phase arrest. Although these inhibitors perform the same function in cell cycle progression, their targets are slightly different. Palbociclib inhibits cyclin D1-CDK4, cyclin D2-CDK6, and cyclin D3-CDK4. Ribociclib targets cyclin D1-CDK4 and cyclin D3-CDK6. Abemaciclib targets cyclin D1-CDK4/6
In vitro experimental data of radiosensitization effects
| Authors | CDK4/6 inhibitor | Human cell line | Efficacy with radiotherapy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whiteway et al. [ | Palbociclib | Medulloblastoma (Daoy) (ONS-76) | SF2 a ↓ SER10 b 1.6, SER50 c 1.5 SER10 2.3, SER50 2.3 |
| Hashizume et al. [ | Palbociclib | Intracranial ATRT d (BT12) (BT16) | DEF e 1.16–1.60 DEF 1.18–1.70 |
| Whittaker et al. [ | Palbociclib | Glioblastoma (GBM-L1, HW1, RN1, BAH1) | Colony numbers drop to zero |
| Naz et al. [ | Abemaciclib | NSCLC (A549, H460, H820, H1975) | DMF f 1.30–1.71 |
| Tao et al. [ | Palbociclib and Trametinib | NSCLC (A549, H460) | Cell survival fraction ↓ Apoptosis ↑ |
| Huang et al. [ | Palbociclib | HCC (Hep3B, Huh7) CCA g (HuCCT1) | Tumor sphere numbers ↓ Colony numbers ↓ |
| Xie et al. [ | Palbociclib | NPC (CNE-1) (CNE-2) | SF2 ↓ SER 1.118–1.475 SER 1.10–1.20 |
| Gottgens et al. [ | Palbociclib | HNSCC (UT-SCC-24A) | SER 1.36–1.60 |
| Tai et al. [ | Ribociclib | HNSCC (OML1, OML1-R) | Colony numbers ↓ Cell viability ↓ |
| Fernández-Aroca et al. [ | Palbociclib | Breast cancer (MCF-7) Lung cancer (A549) Colorectal cancer (HCT116) | Cell survival fraction ↓ |
| Li et al. [ | Ribociclib and CA3 | EAC h (Flo-1 XTR) | Colony numbers ↓ |
a SF2, survival fraction at 2 Gy
b SER10, sensitizer enhancement ratio at 10% survival
c SER50, sensitizer enhancement ratio at 50% survival
d ATRT, atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor
e DEF, radiation dose enhancement factor
f DMF, radiation dose modifying factor
g CCA, cholangiocarcinoma
h EAC, esophageal adenocarcinoma
In vivo experimental data of radiosensitization effects
| Authors | CDK4/6 inhibitor | Xenograft | Efficacy with radiotherapy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hashizume et al. [ | Palbociclib | Intracranial ATRT (BT12) (BT16) Glioblastoma (GBM43) | Median survival time increased by 24 to 26 days (1.4-fold) Median survival time increased by 31.5 to 34.5 days (3.3-fold) Median survival time increased by 10 to 13.5 days (1.6-fold) |
| Whittaker et al. [ | Palbociclib | Glioblastoma (RN1) | Median survival time increased by 8 days |
| Naz et al. [ | Abemaciclib | NSCLC (H460) | Tumor regrowth delay 8 and 9 days, inhibit IR-induced tumor vasculogenesis |
| Tao et al. [ | Palbociclib and Trametinib | NSCLC (A549) | Tumor volume ↓ Proliferation ↓ Apoptosis ↑ |
| Huang et al. [ | Palbociclib | HCC (Huh7) | Tumor volume ↓ Tumor weight ↓ |
| Li et al. [ | Ribociclib and CA3 | EAC (Flo-1 XTR) | Tumor volume ↓ Tumor weight ↓ |
| Barton et al. [ | Palbociclib | Ink4a-ARF- deficient BSG a mouse model | Median survival time increased by 10 days (19%) |
a BSG, brainstem glioma
Clinical trials with CDK4/6 inhibitors in combination with IR
| Cancer Type | Phase | Arm | n | Status | NCT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HGG a, DIPGb, bithalamic HGG | I/II | Ribociclib + IR | 24 | Active, not recruiting | NCT02607124 |
| Glioma (HGG, DIPG et al.) | I | Ribociclib + Everolimus + IR | 24 | Recruiting | NCT03355794 |
| Locally advanced HNSCC | I/II | Palbociclib + Cetuximab + IMRT c | 33 | Recruiting | NCT03024489 |
| HPV-unrelated HNSCC | II | Palbociclib + Cetuximab or Cisplatin + IMRT | 29 | Recruiting | NCT03389477 |
Bone metastatic breast cancer (HR+/HER2-) | II | Palbociclib + Hormone therapy + IR | 42 | Recruiting | NCT03691493 |
| Metastatic breast cancer (HR+/HER2-) | II | Palbociclib + Letrozole ± SBRT d | 204 | Not yet recruiting | NCT04220476 |
a HGG, high-grade glioma
b DIPG, diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma
c IMRT, intensity-modulated radiation therapy
d SBRT, stereotactic body radiation therapy
Case reports and clinical studies with CDK4/6 inhibitors in combination with IR
| Authors | Patients | Arm | Toxicity | Efficacy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hans et al. [ | Metastatic breast cancer (HR+/HER2-) | Palbociclib + Fulvestrant + palliative IR | Digestive toxicity: mucositis (grade 1 = 20%, grade 2 = 20%) Hematological toxicity: grade 3 neutropenia = 40%, grade 3 anemia = 20%, grade 3 thrombopenia = 40% No skin toxicity | Symptom control and pain relief (100%) |
| Ippolito et al. [ | Metastatic breast cancer (HR+) | Palbociclib or Ribociclib + palliative IR | Hematological toxicity: neutropenia (grade 2 = 12.5%, grade 3 = 25%, grade 4 = 6.3%) | Absent |
| Figura et al. [ | Brain metastatic breast cancer (HR+) lesions = 42 | Palbociclib or Abemaciclib + SBRT | Radionecrosis (2 lesions, 5%) No neurologic toxicity or scalp toxicity | Median OS 36.7 months Six-month local control (88%) Six-month distant brain control (61%) |
| Chowd-hary et al. [ | Metastatic breast cancer (HR+/HER2-) | Palbociclib + Fulvestrant or Letrozole + palliative IR | Hematological toxicity: grade 1 = 87.5%, grade 2 = 12.5% No grade 2 or higher cutaneous, neurologic, or gastrointestinal toxicity | Local control and pain relief (100%) |