| Literature DB >> 35582226 |
Maristella Bungaro1, Consuelo Buttigliero1, Marcello Tucci2.
Abstract
In recent years, many therapeutic advances have been made in the management of castration-resistant prostate cancer, with the development and approval of many new drugs. The androgen receptor (AR) is the main driver in prostate cancer growth and progression and the most effective therapeutic agents are still directed against this pathway. Among these, new generation hormonal agents (NHA) including enzalutamide, abiraterone acetate, apalutamide, and darolutamide have shown to improve overall survival and quality of life of prostate cancer patients. Unfortunately, despite the demonstrated benefit, not all patients respond to treatment and almost all are destined to develop a resistant phenotype. Although the resistance mechanisms are not fully understood, the most studied ones include the activation of both dependent and independent AR signalling pathways. Recent findings about multiple growth-promoting and survival pathways in advanced prostate cancer suggest the presence of alternative mechanisms involved in disease progression, and an interplay between these pathways and AR signalling. In this review we discuss the possible mechanisms of primary and acquired resistance to NHA with a focus on AR independent pathways.Entities:
Keywords: abiraterone; androgen receptor signalling; castration-resistant prostate cancer; enzalutamide; hormonal treatment; resistance mechanisms
Year: 2020 PMID: 35582226 PMCID: PMC8992570 DOI: 10.20517/cdr.2020.42
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Drug Resist ISSN: 2578-532X
Outcomes and toxicities of the pivotal NHA studies
| Study name | Trial registration | Intervention/treatment | Outcome (primary endpoint) | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| COU-AA-301 | NCT00638690 | Abiraterone Acetate | OS 14.8 | Fluid retention
|
| AFFIRM | NCT00974311 | Enzalutamide | OS 18.4 | Fatigue
|
| COU-AA-302 | NCT00887198 | Abiraterone Acetate | OS 34.7 | Fluid retention
|
| PREVAIL | NCT01212991 | Enzalutamide | OS (est) 32.4 | Fatigue
|
| SPARTAN | NCT01946204 | Apalutamide | MFS 40.5 | Rash
|
| TITAN | NCT02489318 | Apalutamide | 24 mo OS 84.2% | Rash
|
| ARAMIS | NCT02200614 | Darolutamide | MFS 40.4 | Fatigue |
| PROSPER | NCT02003924 | Enzalutamide | MFS 36.6 | Fatigue
|
NHA: new generation hormonal agents; mCRPC: metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer, OS: overall survival; mo: months; HR: hazard ratio; CI: confidence interval; rPFS: radiographic progression free survival; est: estimated; MFS: metastasis free survival; mCSPC: metastatic Castration sensitive prostate cancer
Ongoing clinical trials evaluating new strategies to overcome AR-independent mechanism of resistance to new generation hormonal therapy
| Mechanism of resistance | NCT | Intervention/Treatment | Status* |
|---|---|---|---|
| GR/PR overexpression | NCT02012296 | Mifepristone + Enzalutamide | Recruiting |
| EMT | NCT02452008 | Galunisertib + Enzalutamide | Recruiting |
| NCT02339168 | Metformin Hydrochloride + Enzalutamide | Active, not recruiting | |
| NCT02640534 | Metformin + Enzalutamide | Recruiting | |
| Immune evasion | NCT02861573 | Pembrolizumab + Enzalutamide, Abiraterone, Docetaxel or Olaparib | Recruiting |
| NCT02787005 | Pembrolizumab +/- Enzalutamide | Active, not recruiting | |
| NCT03338790 | Nivolumab + Rucaparib, Docetaxel or Enzalutamide | Recruiting | |
| NCT04100018 | Nivolumab + Docetaxel | Recruiting | |
| NCT03016312 | Atezolizumab + Enzalutamide | Active, not recruiting | |
| NCT03177187 | AZD5069 + Enzalutamide | Recruiting | |
| PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway | NCT02125084 | Everolimus + Enzalutamide | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT02833883 | CC-115 + Enzalutamide | Active, not recruiting | |
| NCT02407054 | LY3023414 + Enzalutamide | Completed | |
| NCT02106507 | Everolimus + Apalutamide | Active, not recruiting | |
| NCT03072238 | Ipatasertib + Abiraterone | Active, not recruiting | |
| HGF/MET pathway | NCT02207504 | Crizotinib + Enzalutamide | Active, not recruiting |
*Updated at June 2020. AR: androgen receptor; GR: glucocorticoid receptor; PR: progesterone receptor; EMT: epithelial-mesenchymal transition
Figure 1AR-independent mechanisms of resistance to new generation hormonal therapy and interaction with AR signalling. AR: androgen receptor; NE: neuroendocrine transformation; TKR: tyrosine kinase receptor; CDK: cyclin dependent kinase