| Literature DB >> 34068388 |
Miriam González-Conde1,2, Celso Yañez-Gómez1, Rafael López-López1,2,3,4, Clotilde Costa1,2.
Abstract
Breast cancer (BC) is the most common cancer diagnosed in women worldwide. Approximately 70% of BC patients have the luminal subtype, which expresses hormone receptors (HR+). Adjuvant endocrine treatments are the standard of care for HR+/HER2- BC patients. Over time, approximately 30% of those patients develop endocrine resistance and metastatic disease. Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CDKi), in combination with an aromatase inhibitor or fulvestrant, have demonstrated superior efficacies in increasing progression-free survival, with a safe toxicity profile, in HR+/HER2- metastatic BC patients. CDKi blocks kinases 4/6, preventing G1/S cell cycle transition. However, not all of the patients respond to CDKi, and those who do respond ultimately develop resistance to the combined therapy. Studies in tumour tissues and cell lines have tried to elucidate the mechanisms that underlie this progression, but there are still no conclusive data. Over the last few years, liquid biopsy has contributed relevant information. Circulating tumour materials are potential prognostic markers for determining patient prognosis in metastatic luminal BC, for monitoring disease, and for treatment selection. This review outlines the different studies performed using liquid biopsy in patients with HR+ metastatic BC treated with CDKi plus endocrine therapy. We mainly focus on those studies that describe the possible resistance mechanisms in circulating tumour-derived material.Entities:
Keywords: CDK inhibitors; breast cancer; liquid biopsy; resistance mechanisms; therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34068388 PMCID: PMC8153557 DOI: 10.3390/jpm11050407
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Figure 1Regulation of the cell cycle in HR+/HER2- mBC patients. The regulation of the cell cycle is mediated by the CCND1–CDK4/6-RB axis. The CCND1–CDK4/6 complex phosphorylates the RB protein, which releases E2F transcription factors. The latter lead to the G1/S transition of the cell cycle. The cyclin–CDK complexes are, in turn, regulated by other cyclins or intrinsic CDK inhibitors (INK4 and CIP/KIP family members) (in red). The current treatments in HR + mBC are endocrine therapy (in purple) and CDK inhibitors (in green). (HR: hormone receptor, HER2: human epithelial growth factor receptor 2, CCND1: cyclin D1, CDK4/6: cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6, RB: retinoblastoma, E2F: E2F transcription factor, CDK inhibitors: cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, INK4: inhibitors of CDK4, CIP/KIP: CDK interacting protein/kinase inhibitory protein).
Figure 2Scheme of metastatic progression and potential use of liquid biopsy. In the bloodstream, there are different circulating tumour cell (CTC) subpopulations. Those that have survived the therapy and become resistant are responsible for the recurrence and progression of the disease to distal locations. Liquid biopsy permits the sampling of these and other tumour entities, such as circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) or extracellular vesicles. As such, serial liquid biopsy throughout therapy is useful for studying the appearance of treatment resistance.
Summary of the literature review based on the analysis of tumour-derived material from HR+/HER2- advanced breast cancer patients using liquid biopsy. (NGS: Next Generation Sequencing, ddPCR: droplet-digital PCR, qPCR: quantitative PCR)
| Tumour-Derived Material | Biomarker | Therapy | Technique | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| PALOMA 3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | Exome sequencing | O’Leary B, Cutts RJ, Liu Y, et al. [ | |
| Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | NGS | Condorelli R, Spring L, O’Shaughnessy J, et al. [ | ||
| PALOMA 3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | Exome sequencing | O’Leary B, Cutts RJ, Liu Y, et al. [ | ||
| ddPCR | Fribbens C, O’Leary B, Kilburn L, et al. [ | |||
| Palbociclib plus AI/fulvestrant | Exome sequencing | Wander SA, Cohen O, Gong X, et al. [ | ||
| MONALEESA-2: Ribociclib plus letrozole | NGS | Formisano L, Lu Y, Servetto A, et al. [ | ||
| NGS | Hortobagyi GN, Stemmer SM, Burris HA, et al. [ | |||
| PALOMA 3: Palbociclib plus fulvestrant | Exome sequencing | O’Leary B, Cutts RJ, Liu Y, et al. [ | ||
| BEAMing assay | Cristofanilli M, Turner NC, Bondarenko I, et al. [ | |||
|
| CTC enumeration | TREnd trial: | CellSearch System | Galardi F, De Luca F, Biagioni C, et al. [ |
|
| CDK9/4 and TK1 mRNA copies | ECLIPS study: CDKi plus endoncrine theraphy | ddPCR | Del Re M, Bertolini I, Crucitta S, et al. [ |
| miRNA 432-5-p | Palbociclib plus letrozole/fulvestrant | mRNA/miRNA array | Cornell L, Wander SA, Visal T, Wagle N, Shapiro GI [ |
Summary of the advantages and disadvantages of different circulating tumour entities (ctDNA, CTCs, EVs). (ctDNA: circulating tumour DNA, CTC: circulating tumour cells, EVs: extracellular vesicles).
| CTC | ctDNA | EVs | |
|---|---|---|---|
| High concentration | NO | NO | YES |
| Study of tumour mutations and methylation patterns | YES | YES | YES |
| Study of tumour RNA transcription profile | YES | NO | YES |
| Detection of systemic changes and inflammation | NO | NO | YES |
| Use of biobanked samples | YES * | YES | YES |
| Functional assays | YES | NO | YES |
| Morphological characterisation | YES | NO | NO |
| Validated predictive value | YES | NO | NO |
* Biobanked samples do not allow performing functional analysis [77,78,79].