| Literature DB >> 33172113 |
Alberto D'Angelo1, Navid Sobhani2, Robert Chapman3, Stefan Bagby1, Carlotta Bortoletti4, Mirko Traversini5, Katia Ferrari6, Luca Voltolini7, Jacob Darlow1, Giandomenico Roviello8.
Abstract
The treatment of patients affected by non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has been revolutionised by the discovery of druggable mutations. ROS1 (c-ros oncogene) is one gene with druggable mutations in NSCLC. ROS1 is currently targeted by several specific tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), but only two of these, crizotinib and entrectinib, have received Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval. Crizotinib is a low molecular weight, orally available TKI that inhibits ROS1, MET and ALK and is considered the gold standard first-line treatment with demonstrated significant activity for lung cancers harbouring ROS1 gene rearrangements. However, crizotinib resistance often occurs, making the treatment of ROS1-positive lung cancers more challenging. A great effort has been undertaken to identify a new generation or ROS1 inhibitors. In this review, we briefly introduce the biology and role of ROS1 in lung cancer and discuss the underlying acquired mechanisms of resistance to crizotinib and the promising new agents able to overcome resistance mechanisms and offer alternative efficient therapies.Entities:
Keywords: NSCLC; ROS1; TKI inhibitors; crizotinib; lung cancer; resistance mechanisms; solid tumours; targeted therapies; toxicity
Year: 2020 PMID: 33172113 PMCID: PMC7694780 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12113293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Main ROS1 fusion partners in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
| No | Gene | Alias | Description | Estimated Frequency in NSCLC | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
| Cluster of differentiation 74 | 32–42% | [ | |
| 2 |
| Solute carrier family 34 member 2 gene | 12–18% | [ | |
| 3 |
| Ezrin gene | 6–15% | [ | |
| 4 |
| Tropomyosin 3 gene | 3–15% | [ | |
| 5 |
| Syndecan 4 gene | 7–11% | [ | |
| 6 |
|
| Fused in Glioblastoma | 2–3% | [ |
| 7 |
| Transmembrane protein 106B | 1% | [ | |
| 8 |
| Coiled-coil domain containing 6 gene | 1% | [ | |
| 9 |
|
| LIM domain and actin-binding 1 gene | 1% | [ |
| 10 |
| Lysine deficient protein kinase 1 | 1% | [ | |
| 11 |
| Leucine-rich repeats and immunoglobulin-like domains 3 gene | 1% | [ | |
| 12 |
| Tumour protein D52 like 1 gene | 1% | [ | |
| 13 |
| Clathrin heavy chain gene | 1% | [ | |
| 14 |
| Moesin gene | 1% | [ | |
| 15 |
|
| Endoplasmic reticulum protein retention receptor 2 gene | 1% | [ |
| 16 |
| Myosin VA (heavy chain 12, myoxin) | 1% | [ | |
| 17 |
| TRK-fused gene | 1% | [ | |
| 18 |
| RNA-binding protein with multiple splicing | 1% | [ |
Ongoing clinical trials using TKI against ROS1-rearranged lung cancer.
| Clinical Trial Identifier | Study Design | Intervention/s | Setting | Primary Endpoint | Phase | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT03399487 | 46 Participants, | LDK378 (Ceritinib) | Second line | ORR | 2 | Recruiting |
| NCT03972189 | 111 Participants, | TQ-B3101 | Second line | ORR | 2 | Recruiting |
| NCT02927340 | 30 Participants, | Lorlatinib | First or later line | DCR | 2 | Recruiting |
| NCT01639508 | 68 Participants, | Cabozantinib | Second line | ORR | 2 | Recruiting |
| NCT01970865 | 334 Participants, Non-Randomized, Open label | PF-06463922 | First or later line | DLT (phase 1) | 2 | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT04302025 | 60 Participants, | Alectinib | Second or later line | MPR | 2 | Not yet recruiting |
| NCT04084717 | 50 Participants, | Crizotinib | Second line | RR | 2 | Not yet recruiting |
| NCT03088930 | 18 Participants, | Crizotinib | Second line | RR | 2 | Recruiting |
| NCT03087448 | 69 Participants, | Ceritinib (Phase 1) | Second or later line | MTD | 1–2 | Recruiting |
| NCT02183870 | 30 Participants, | Crizotinib | Any prior treatment | ORR | 2 | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT01964157 | 32 Participants | LDK378 | Second or later line | ORR | 2 | Recruiting |
| NCT04292119 | 96 Participants | Lorlatinib, Binimetinib, Crizotinib | Any prior treatment | MTD, OR | 1–2 | Recruiting |
| NCT03608007 | 69 Participants | X-396 Capsule (Ensartinib) | Second line | OR | 2 | Recruiting |
| NCT03718117 | 70 Participants | Crizotinib | Any prior treatment | Demographics | / | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT04005144 | 18 Participants | Brigatinib + Binimetinib | Second-line or later | AE, DLT | 1 | Recruiting |
| NCT02568267 | 300 Participants | Entrectinib | Any prior treatment | OR | 2 | Recruiting |
Techniques for the detection of ROS1 rearrangements.
| Technique | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| IHC | High sensitivity | Subjective evaluation |
| FISH | Long time trustworthiness | Moderately expansive |
| RT-PCR | Good specificity | FFPE samples only |
| NGS | Detection of novel fusions | More validation required |
IHC: Immunohistochemistry; FISH: Fluorescent in-situ hybridization; PCR: polymerase chain reaction; NGS: next-generation sequencing; AFC: alcohol-fixed cytology; FFPE: formalin-fixed and formalin-embedded.
Figure 1Molecular mechanisms of crizotinib in ROS1-rearranged lung cancer patients.
ROS1 mutations conferring resistance to crizotinib and mechanism of action.
| Mutation | ROS1 fusion | Location | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|
| D2033N | CD74-ROS1 | Kinase hinge | Modification of electrostatic forces |
| G2032R | CD74-ROS1 | Kinase hinge | Steric interference |
| L2026M | CD74-ROS1 | Inhibitor binding site | Hindrance of drug binding |
| L2155S | SLC34A2-ROS1 | Not known | Protein malfunction |
| S1986F/Y | EZR-ROS1 | Not known | Obstruction of the active site of the enzyme |