| Literature DB >> 35326568 |
Katarzyna Szklener1, Paulina Chmiel1, Adam Michalski1, Sławomir Mańdziuk1.
Abstract
Bladder neoplasms, including the most common urothelial carcinoma, have been an escalating problem for years, especially in highly developed countries. Recent decades have brought us a steadily growing share of this cancer in terms of both morbidity and mortality statistics. Bladder neoplasms are not only a therapeutic challenge but also an economical one due to the demanding, costly diagnostics and treatment. The treatment of urothelial cancer can be divided depending on the stage and advancement; thus, we can distinguish three main categories: non-muscle invasive bladder cancer, conventionally treated by surgical interventions; muscle invasive bladder cancer, conventionally treated with chemotherapeutics; and advanced bladder cancer with distant metastases, conventionally treated with the intensive chemotherapy in the MVAC scheme (methotrexate, vinblastine, doxorubicin, and cisplatin). Recent years have brought a breakthrough: immunotherapy and targeted therapy were discovered to be beneficial for patients disqualified from chemotherapy or patients who progressed despite treatment. This literature review summarizes the latest research into the use of targeted therapy in the treatment of advanced bladder cancer, its benefits, and its limitations.Entities:
Keywords: bladder cancer; fibroblast growth factor receptor; immunotherapy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35326568 PMCID: PMC8946699 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14061416
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1(A) Structure of fibroblast growth factor receptor and main mutations found in advanced bladder cancer. FGFRs are tyrosine kinase receptors, consisting of a heparin-binding sequence and immunoglobulin-like extracellular sequence and a hydrophobic transmembrane domain and intracellular tyrosine kinase domain [37]. Most common genetic changes are missense mutations and FGFR3-TACC3 fusion, primarily in ligand-binding domains (R248C and S249C), less frequently in the transmembrane domain (G370C, S371C and Y373C), rarely in the tyrosine kinase domain [27,37]. Alterations lead to overexpression and hyperactivation of FGFR. (B) The FGF signaling pathway. Ligand binds to an FGFR monomer, which leads to dimerization and intracellular phosphorylation, resulting in conformational changes. This provides the means to start signaling pathways for FGFRs. Activated FGFRs phosphorylate FRS2, which opens the way for PI3K, AKT, mTOR, or the RAS/RAF/MEK/MAPK cascade. Activated FGFRs also phosphorylate JAK kinases, which lead to STAT activation. FGFRs can also recruit and phosphorylate PLCγ, thereby initiating signaling through the DAG/PKC or IP3-Ca2+. All of those pathways have a crucial role in tumor development [25,27,38,39,40]. FGFRs (fibroblast growth factor receptors), FRS2 (fibroblast growth factor receptor substrate 2), PI3K (phosphoinositide 3-kinase), AKT (protein kinase B), mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin), MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinase), JAK (Janus kinase), STAT (signal transducer and activator of transcription), PLCγ (phospholipase C gamma), DAG (dystroglycan), PKC (protein kinase C), IP3 (inositol trisphosphate).
FGFR inhibitors in urothelial carcinoma, currently under clinical trial or marked.
| Medication | Target | Population | Phase | Comedication | NCT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Erdafitinib | FGFR1–3 | FGFR2/3 mutation or fusion | Marked | n.a. | NCT02365597 |
| Ib/II | Cetrelimab | NCT03473743 | |||
| Pemigatinib | FGFR1–3 | FGF or FGFR alteration platinum ineligible, FGFR3 mutation or rearrangement | II | n.a. | NCT02872714 |
| Pembrolizumab | NCT04003610 | ||||
| Rogaratinib | FGFR1–4 | High FGFR1 or 3 expression cisplatin ineligible | II/III | n.a. | NCT03410693 |
| High FGFR1 or 3 expression | IB/II | Atezolizumab | NCT03473756 | ||
| Infigratinib | FGFR1–3 | Altered FGFR3 | III | n.a. | NCT04197986 |
| Futibatinib | FGFR1–4 | Any solid tumor and disease progression/At least one FGF/FGFR mutation | I/II | n.a. | NCT02052778 |
| Advanced/metastatic cancer with FGFR2 aberration | III | Gemcitabine/Cisplatin | NCT04093362 | ||
| Advanced/metastatic urothelial carcinoma with or without FGFR mutation | II | Pembrolizumab | NCT04601857 | ||
| Dovitinib | FGFR1–3 | Urothelial carcinoma both with mutant FGFR3 and wild-type FGFR3 | II | n.a. | NCT00790426 |
| Vofatamab | FGFR3 | Stage IV locally advanced/metastatic urothelial carcinoma, FGFR3 mutation | Ib/II | Docetaxel | NCT02401542 |
| II | Pembrolizumab | NCT03123055 | |||
| Derazantinib | FGFR1–4 | Locally advanced/metastatic solid tumor with FGFR aberration | I/II | n.a. | NCT01752920 |
FGF (fibroblast growth factor); FGFR (fibroblast growth factor receptor); n.a. (not applicable).