| Literature DB >> 34066606 |
Marina Elena Cazzaniga1,2, Nicoletta Cordani1, Serena Capici2, Viola Cogliati2, Francesca Riva3, Maria Grazia Cerrito1.
Abstract
Metronomic chemotherapy treatment (mCHT) refers to the chronic administration of low doses chemotherapy that can sustain prolonged, and active plasma levels of drugs, producing favorable tolerability and it is a new promising therapeutic approach in solid and in hematologic tumors. mCHT has not only a direct effect on tumor cells, but also an action on cell microenvironment, by inhibiting tumor angiogenesis, or promoting immune response and for these reasons can be considered a multi-target therapy itself. Here we review the state of the art of mCHT use in some classical tumour types, such as breast and no small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), see what is new regarding most recent data in different cancer types, such as glioblastoma (GBL) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML), and new drugs with potential metronomic administration. Finally, a look at the strategic use of mCHT in the context of health emergencies, or in low -and middle-income countries (LMICs), where access to adequate healthcare is often not easy, is mandatory, as we always need to bear in in mind that equity in care must be a compulsory part of our medical work and research.Entities:
Keywords: clinical trials; mechanism of action; metronomic chemotherapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34066606 PMCID: PMC8125766 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13092236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Summarizes the contributions of different Authors in understanding the mechanisms of action of mCHT.
| Anti-Angiogenic Effect | Direct Tumor Cell Death | Immune System Activation |
|---|---|---|
| Browder, T. (2000) [ | Vives, M (2013) [ | Tanaka, H (2009) [ |
| Klement, G. (2000) [ | Kerbel, RS (2017) [ | Tanaka, H (2009) [ |
| Bocci, G. (2003) [ | André, N (2017) [ | Taguchi, T (2010) [ |
| Mainetti, LE (2013) [ | Cerrito, MG (2018) [ | Stockler, MR (2011) [ |
| Shaked, Y (2016) [ | Ueno, T (2019) [ | Orecchioni, S (2018) [ |
| Schito, L (2020) [ | Salem, AR (2020) [ | Khan, KA (2020) [ |
Figure 1Timeline showing the discovery of the main impacts of the metronomic schedule. 1. Antiangiogenic: inhibiting the proliferating and the circulation of endothelial cells (EC) and by modulating the pro-and-antiangiogenic factors; 2. direct tumor cell death: targeting cancer stem cells (CSC) and inducing apoptosis, autophagy, and tumor dormancy; 3. activation of the anticancer immune response. These multiple mechanisms delineate metronomic as multitarget therapy.
Summary of results of trials using mCHT in classical cancers (breast, lung, CRC).
| Author (Year) | Setting | Efficacy | Safety |
|---|---|---|---|
| BREAST CANCER | |||
| Garcia-Saenz et al. (2008) [ | Phase II; Pretrated patients | CBR 63.6% PFS 7.5 m | Grade 3–4 |
| Dellapasqua et al. (2008) [ | Phase II; Metastatic | CBR 68% | Grade 3 |
| Addeo et al. (2010) [ | Phase II; I line | ORR 38% | Grade 3 |
| Taguchi et al. (2010) [ | Phase II; I line | CBR 42% | Grade 3 |
| Stockler et al. (2011) [ | Phase III; I line | Grade 3–4 | |
| Fedele et al. (2012) [ | Phase II; Pretreated patients | CBR 62% | Grade 3 |
| Yoshimoto et al. (2012) [ | Phase II; I and II line | ORR 44.4% | Grade 3 |
| Aurilio et al. (2012) [ | Case-cohort report; Metastatic | CBR 56% | Grade 3 transaminases toxicity 3% |
| Wang et al. (2012) [ | Phase II; Pretreated patients | ORR 30.3% CBR 53.0% | Grade 3–4 |
| Schwartzberg et al. (2014) [ | Phase II; Metastatic | TTP 26.9 m PFS 14.9 m OS 28.6 m | Grade 3 |
| Cazzaniga et al. (2016) [ | Phase II; Metastatic | CBR 48.8% | Grade 3–4 |
| De Iuliis et al. (2015) [ | Phase II; Metastatic | CBR 50% | No Grade 3–4 events |
|
| |||
| Hainsworth et al. (2001) [ | Phase II; I line | ORR 18% | Grade 3 |
| Correale et al. (2006) [ | Pilot Phase II; Stage IIIB/IV | ORR 45.2% | Grade 3 |
| Kouroussis et al. (2009) [ | Phase II; Pretreated patients | ORR 6.5% | Grade 4 |
| Correale et al. (2011) [ | Phase II; I line | ORR 68.8% | Grade 3–4 |
| Noronha et al. (2013) [ | Retrospective Analysis; Pretreated and I line platinum-ineligible patients | ORR 35% | Grade 3 |
| Marquette et al. (2013) [ | Phase II; I line nonsquamous NSCLC | PFS 9 m | Grade 3–4 |
| Tan et al. (2015) [ | Phase I; ≥ II line | ORR 8.9% | Grade 3–4 |
| Katsaounis et al. (2015) [ | Phase II; I line | ORR 37.5% | Grade 3–4 |
| Revannasiddaiah et al. (2016) [ | Retrospective Analysis; Stage II and III | ORR 41.9% | N/A |
| Sutiman et al. (2016) [ | Phase I (dose escalation); ≥ II line | ORR 38% (conventional schedule) | Grade 3–4 |
| Pastina et al. (2017) [ | Retrospective analysis; Metastatic | OS CHT | No significant adverse events or toxicity-related |
| Pujol et al. (2019) [ | Meta-analysis; Advanced and metastatic | OS 8.7 m | Grade 3–4 |
| Platania et al. (2019) [ | Randomized Phase II; Maintenance | PFS 4.3 m | Grade 3–4 |
| Camerini et al. (2019) [ | Retrospective Analysis; Stage IIIB/IV | ORR 17.8% | Grade 3–4 |
| Xu et al. (2020) [ | Meta-analysis; Stage IIIB/IV and advanced NSCLC | ORR 12% | Grade 3–4 |
| Camerini et al. (2021) [ | Randomized Phase II; Stage IIIB/IV | G4PFS 4.0 m | Grade 3–4 |
| Provencio et al. (2021) [ | Phase II; stage III | PFS 11.5 m | Grade 3–4 |
|
| |||
| Budman et al. (1998) [ | Phase I; Solid Tumors unresponsive to standard therapy | 1 mixed response and 1 SD | Most frequent grade 3–4 toxicity at MTD: diarrhea |
| Herben et al. (1999) [ | Phase I; Solid Tumors refractory to standard therapy | 2 partial response (1 CRC) | Dose limiting toxicity: gastrointestinal events (diarrhea with or without nausea and/or vomiting) |
| Lokich (2004) [ | Retrospective analysis; MetastaticPts 50 (26 CRC) | N/A | Grade 2–3 |
| Allegrini et al. (2008) [ | Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic study; Metastatic pretreated | SD 20% | No grade 3–4 events |
| Nannini et al. (2009) [ | Case Report; Elderly metastatic elderly (CRC and gastric cancer) | SD all 3 pts | N/A |
| Allegrini et al. (2012) [ | Phase II; metastatic pretreated | SD 45% | No grade 3–4 events |
| Ogata et al. (2013) [ | Phase II; First line | ORR 48.9% | Grade 3–4 |
| Romiti et al. (2015) [ | Retrospective analysis; Metastatic pretreated or frail | DCR 26% | Grade 3 |
| Simkens et al. (2015) [ | Phase III; Maintenance | PFS 11.7 m | Grade 3–4 |
| Hagman et al. (2016) [ | Phase III; Maintenance | PFS rate at 3 m 66.7% | Grade 3–4 |
| Cremolini et al. (2019) [ | Ranzomized phase II; Maintenance | PFS 10.3 m | Grade 3–4 |
Summary of results of trials using mCHT in different cancers (H&N, GBL, ovarian cancer, AML).
| Author (Year) | Setting | Efficacy | Safety |
|---|---|---|---|
| HEAD AND NECK CANCER | |||
| Patil (2019) [ | Phase I-II | 3-months PFS rate 71.1% | Grade 3–5 |
| Patil (2020) [ | Phase III | OS | Grade 3–5 |
|
| |||
| Reynés (2014) [ | Phase I | ORR 8.3% | Grade 3–4 |
| Peters (2018) [ | Phase I/II | 6-months PFS rate 53.8% | Grade 3–4 |
|
| |||
| Gupta (2019) [ | Phase II, randomized | ORR | Grade 3–4 |
| Hall (2020) [ | Phase II, randomized | PFS | Grade 3–4 |
| Zsiros (2021) [ | Phase II | ORR 47.5% | Grade 3–4 |
|
| |||
| Kapoor (2016) [ | Phase II | OS | No Grade 4 |
| Pongudom (2020) [ | Phase III | OS | Grade 3–4 |