| Literature DB >> 35740630 |
Anita Capalbo1, Chiara Lauritano1.
Abstract
Multiple myeloma (MM) is a blood cancer that occurs in the plasma cells (PCs), a type of white blood cell. Despite the progress of several current treatments that prolong the overall patient's survival, most MM cases are incurable. For this reason, many efforts have been undertaken by the scientific community in the search for new treatments. BLENREPTM and Aplidin® are two marine-derived drugs currently in use for MM. In addition, other natural products have been identified from marine organisms, tested for their possible anticancer properties, and are in preclinical or clinical trials for MM, including cytarabine, a compound in use for leukaemia treatment. Between the most successful marine compounds in fighting MM, there are molecules with specific targets, such as the elongation factor 1-alpha 2 and proteasome inhibitors, and compounds conjugated with antibodies that recognise specific cell types and direct the drug to the correct cell target. Active compounds belong to different chemical classes, from cyclic peptides to alkaloids, highlighting the importance of screening the plethora of compounds produced by marine organisms. In this review, we summarise the current state of art of MM therapies focusing on the marine natural product emerging roles.Entities:
Keywords: bioactive compounds; cancer; marine natural product; marine organism; multiple myeloma
Year: 2022 PMID: 35740630 PMCID: PMC9220879 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14122965
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Figure 1Multiple myeloma statistics. (a) Multiple myeloma trends in incidence or death rates. Data sources: Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) 9 registries, National Cancer Institute, 2021© Copyright American Cancer Society, 2018; (b) Scientific literature on multiple myeloma over the last few decades. Adapted from data source: PubMed. Search query: “multiple myeloma”.
Figure 2Schematic representation and positioning of pioneering drugs for treating multiple myeloma over the years (arrow). For each typology of drugs, the most representative compounds with their corresponding commercial names are reported in the specific boxes.
Figure 3Most common combined and approved regimens for treatment of multiple myeloma. Drugs with a different mechanism of action can be used synergistically, resulting in duplet, triplet, or quadruplet therapy depending on the number of used combined drugs. Therapies are named using the first letter of the commercial drug name or active ingredient. Bone-modifying drugs are used before or after treatments to relieve bone pain. Doublet therapy: Vd (velcade–dexamethasone)/Rd (Revlimid–dexamethasone); triplet therapy: RVd (Revlimid–Velcade–dexamethasone)/CyBord (cytoxan–bortezomib–dexamethasone)/KRd (Kyprolis–Revlimid–dexamethasone)/DRd (Darzalex–Revlimid–dexamethasone); quadruplet therapy: DVMP (Darzalex–Velcade–melphalan–prednisone); DVTd (Darzalex–Velcade–Thalidomid–dexamethasone); immunotherapy: CAR-T (Abecma, only for RRMM); bone-modifying drugs (BMD) (bisphosphonates; monoclonal antibody denosumab).
Approved marine drugs for cancer therapy. Active ingredients are actively used to treat MM (in bold) or other cancer types. Derived marine organism, commercial name, manufacturing company, and cancer types are reported for each active ingredient. NSCLC, nonsmall-cell lung carcinoma; SCLC, small-cell lung carcinoma; MM, multiple myeloma; and RRMM, relapsed refractory multiple myeloma.
| Compound | Marine Organism | Commercial Name | Company | Cancer Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Mollusc/cyanobacterium | GlaxoSmithKline | RRMM | |
|
| Tunicate: |
| PharmaMar | MM, leukaemia, lymphoma |
| Lurbinectedin | Tunicate | ZepzelcaTM | PharmaMar | Metastatic |
| Enfortumab vedotin—ejfv | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | PADCEVTM
| Astellas Pharma and Seattle Genetics | Metastatic urothelial cancer |
| Polatuzumab vedotin (DCDS-4501A) | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | PolivyTM
| Genetech/Roche | Non-Hodgkin lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, lymphoma, B-cell lymphoma |
| Trabectedin | Tunicate | Yondelis® | PharmaMar | Soft tissue sarcoma and ovarian cancer |
| Brentuximab vedotin | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | Adcetris® | Seattle Genetics | Anaplastic large T-cell systemic malignant lymphoma, Hodgkin’s disease |
| Eribulin Mesylate (E7389) | Sponge | Halaven® | Eisai Inc. | Metastatic breast cancer |
| Cytarabine | Sponge | Cytosar-U®
| Pfizer | Leukaemia |
* FDA-approved. ** Australia-approved, December 2018.
Marine-derived drugs under clinical trial evaluation. Commercial name (when available), manufacturing company, clinical trial phase, cancer type and clinical trials identifier [48] are reported for each compound. Compounds in clinical trials for MM are in bold. NSCLC, nonsmall-cell lung carcinoma; SCLC, small-cell lung carcinoma; MM, multiple myeloma; RRMM, relapsed refractory multiple myeloma; DLBCL, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma), S.T., solid tumours; GBM, glioblastoma; B.C., breast cancer; RCC, renal-cell carcinoma; PNET, primitive neuroectodermal tumour; EOE, extraosseous Ewing’s sarcoma; N/A, not available.
| Compound | Marine Organism | Commercial Name | Company | Clinical Trial | Cancer Type | Clinical |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Marine actinomycete |
| Triphase | Phase II | MM, RRMM | NCT05050305 |
|
| Fungus | N/A | BeyondSpring Pharmaceuticals | Phase II | MM, | NCT05130827 |
| Lurbinectedin (PM01183) | Tunicate | ZepzelkaTM | PharmaMar | Phase II | SCLC | NCT04358237 |
| AGS-16C3F | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | N/A | Agensys | Phase II | RCC | NCT02639182 |
| PM060184 | Sponge | N/A | PharmaMar | Phase I | ST | NCT01299636 |
| Tisotumab vedotin | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | HuMax®-TF-ADC | GenMab | Phase II | ST | NCT02552121 |
| Ladiratuzumab vedotin | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | N/A | Seattle Genetics | Phase II | ST | NCT04032704 |
| Telisotuzumab vedotin | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | N/A | Abbvie | Phase II | NSLC | NCT03539536 |
| Enapotamab vedotin | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | HuMax®-AXL | Genmab | Phase II | ST | NCT02988817 |
| RC-48 | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | N/A | RemeGen | Phase II | BC, | NCT05134519 |
| Phase II | Melanoma Stage II, | NCT05135715 | ||||
| Phase II | Gastric cancer | NCT05241899 | ||||
| Phase II | Biliary tract cancer | NCT04329429 | ||||
| Phase II | Muscle invasive | NCT05297552 | ||||
| Phase II | NSCLC | NCT04311034 | ||||
| Phase II | Urothelial carcinoma | NCT03809013 | ||||
| Phase I | ST | NCT02881190 | ||||
| Phase II | HER2-positive metastatic or unresectable urothelial cancer | NCT03507166 | ||||
| Phase III | Gastric cancer | NCT04714190 | ||||
| Phase II | Urothelial | NCT04073602 | ||||
| Phase III | HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer, | NCT03500380 | ||||
| Phase II | Gastric cancer | NCT03556345 | ||||
| Phase II | Bladder cancer | NCT05016973 | ||||
| Phase III | Breast cancer | NCT04400695 | ||||
| Phase III | Urothelial cancer | NCT05302284 | ||||
| Phase II | Gastric cancer | NCT05313906 | ||||
| Phase II | Breast cancer | NCT03052634 | ||||
| Phase II | Urothelial cancer | NCT04879329 | ||||
| Phase II | Gastric cancer | NCT05113459 | ||||
| CAB-ROR2 (BA-3021) | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | N/A | BioAtla | Phase II | NSCLC, triple-negative breast cancer, | NCT03504488 |
| CX-2029 (ABBV-2029) | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | N/A | AbbVie and CytomX Therapeutics | Phase II | ST, head and neck cancer, NSCLC, pancreatic cancer, DLBCL | NCT03543813 |
| W0101 | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | N/A | Pierre-Fabre | Phase II | Advanced or metastatic ST | NCT03316638 |
| ARX-788 | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | N/A | Ambrex and ZhejiangMedicine | Phase II | Breast cancer, | NCT04829604 |
| Phase I | ST, | NCT03255070 | ||||
| Phase II | HER2 mutation-related tumours | NCT05041972 | ||||
| Phase II | Breast cancer | NCT05018676 | ||||
| Phase II | HER2-positive, metastatic breast cancer, | NCT05018702 | ||||
| Phase I | Breast neoplasms, | NCT02512237 | ||||
| Phase I | breast neoplasms | NCT04983121 | ||||
| XMT-1536 | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | N/A | Mersana Therapeutics | Phase II | Platinum-resistant ovarian cancer, | NCT03319628 |
| Phase II | Platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer (UPGRADE-A) | NCT04907968 | ||||
| Phase II | Ovarian cancer, | NCT04396340 | ||||
| ALT-P7 | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | N/A | 3SBio and Alteogen | Phase I | ST | NCT03281824 |
| MORAb-202 | Sponge | N/A | Eisai | Phase I | ST | NCT03386942 |
| PF-06804103 | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | N/A | Pfizer and AbbVie | Phase I | Breast neoplasms | NCT03284723 |
| ZW-49 | Mollusc/cyanobacterium | N/A | Zymeworks and BeiGene | Phase I | HER2-expressing cancers | NCT03821233 |
| Synthetic alkaloid | Tunicate/sponge | Zalypsis® (PM00104) | PharmaMar | Phase II | Ewing’s Sarcoma, | NCT01222767 |
| Phase II | Uterine cervical cancer, endometrial cancer | NCT00900562 | ||||
| Phase I | ST lymphoma | NCT00359294 |
Marine-derived compounds or extracts with activity in vitro or in vivo. Preclinical studies showing marine-derived compounds with antimyeloma activity in vitro/in vivo. Mechanism of action (when reported), marine organism, and experimental conditions are reported for each compound. MM, multiple myeloma); UPS, ubiquitin–proteasome system; N/A, not available.
| Compound | Marine Organism | In Vitro/In Vivo | IC50 or Tested Concentration | Administration | Mechanism of Action | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zalypsis® | Tunicate/Sponge | In vitro | 0.1–50 nM | In cell culture medium | Induce apoptosis due to DNA breaks | [ |
| Phase I/II | 3 × 2.0 mg/m2 | Intravenous | [ | |||
| In vivo | 0.75 mg/kg weekly, for three doses in combination with bortezomib and dexamethasone | Intravenous | [ | |||
| Sarcophytonin-A, sarcophytoxide, sarcophine, laevigatol-A | Soft corals | In vitro | 1–25 μg/mL | In cell culture media | UPS Inhibition | [ |
| Reniochalistatin-E | Sponge | In vitro | IC50 values of 4.9 μM | In cell culture media | N/A | [ |
| Nocardiotide-A | Actinomycetes/ | In vitro | IC50 values of 8, 11, | In cell culture media | N/A | [ |
| Lehualide-B | Sponge | In vitro | 0.1−10 μM | In cell culture media | Inhibition of mitochondrial complex I | [ |
| Smenamide-A | Sponge | In vitro | 50 and 100 nM, | In cell culture media | N/A | [ |
| Smenospongidine | Sponge | In vitro | 10–20 μM | In cell culture media | B-catenin downregulation | [ |