| Literature DB >> 36176747 |
Amani Yehya1,2, Fatima Ghamlouche1,2, Amin Zahwe1,2, Yousef Zeid1, Kevork Wakimian1, Deborah Mukherji3, Wassim Abou-Kheir1.
Abstract
Prostate cancer (PCa) is a leading cause of cancer-related morbidity and mortality in men globally. Despite improvements in the diagnosis and treatment of PCa, a significant proportion of patients with high-risk localized disease and all patients with advanced disease at diagnosis will experience progression to metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). Multiple drugs are now approved as the standard of care treatments for patients with mCRPC that have been shown to prolong survival. Although the majority of patients will respond initially, primary and secondary resistance to these therapies make mCRPC an incurable disease. Several molecular mechanisms underlie the development of mCRPC, with the androgen receptor (AR) axis being the main driver as well as the key drug target. Understanding resistance mechanisms is crucial for discovering novel therapeutic strategies to delay or reverse the progression of the disease. In this review, we address the diverse mechanisms of drug resistance in mCRPC. In addition, we shed light on emerging targeted therapies currently being tested in clinical trials with promising potential to overcome mCRPC-drug resistance.Entities:
Keywords: Prostate cancer; androgen receptor; drug resistance; mCRPC; novel targeted therapeutics
Year: 2022 PMID: 36176747 PMCID: PMC9511807 DOI: 10.20517/cdr.2022.15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Drug Resist ISSN: 2578-532X
Summary table of the drugs and agents indicated for mCRPC
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| Abiraterone Acetate | Irreversible selective inhibitor of CYP17-alpha-hydroxylase and C17, 20-lyase coupled with a modest AR antagonist activity[ | COU-AA-301; post-docetaxel[ | ABI increased median overall survival when compared to the placebo group by 3.9 months |
| COU-AA-302; pre-docetaxel[ | ABI significantly increased median overall survival when compared to the placebo group by 8.2 months | |||
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| Enzalutamide | AR antagonist impedes nuclear receptor translocation and DNA binding, induces apoptosis | AFFIRM; post-docetaxel[ | Overall survival increased by 4.8 months in comparison to the control group |
| Darolutamide | ARCADES[ | 86% of patients treated with 1400 mg dose of darolutamide had a 50% or greater decrease in PSA | ||
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| Docetaxel | Inhibits microtubular depolymerization arresting their function | TAX 327; first-line chemotherapy[ | DOC combined with prednisone increased overall survival by 2.9 months when compared to the control group treated with mitoxantrone plus PDN |
| Cabazitaxel | TROPIC, Phase III, randomized, open-label[ | Overall survival increased by 2.4 months in the treatment group (CBZ+ PDN) compared to patients treated with a combination of PDN and mitoxantrone | ||
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| Ra-223 | Emits high energy alpha particles after adhering selectively to regions of elevated bone turnover | ALSYMPCA, Phase III, randomized[ | Patients placed on Ra-223 treatment had 3.6 months increase in survival compared to the placebo group |
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| Olaparib | Impede PARP causing cumulative DNA and cell damage | PROfound Phase III, randomized[ | Patients with mutations in |
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| Sipuleucel-T | Infused within APCs to present PAP peptides | IMPACT trial, Phase III[ | Utilizing sipuleucel-T extended overall survival among men with mCRPC by 10 months |
MOA: Mode of action; AR: androgen receptor; CYP17: Cytochrome P450 enzyme 17; PSA: prostate-specific antigen; ABI: abiraterone; DOC: docetaxel; PDN: prednisone; CBZ: cabazitaxel; ENZ: enzalutamide; PARP: poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase; APC: antigen-presenting cells; PAP: prostatic acid phosphatase.
Figure 1Mechanisms of drug resistance in mCRPC. Several mechanisms of drug resistance are well defined in CRPC, including AR amplification and overexpression, AR point mutations, AR post-translational modifications, AR splice variants, AR co-regulators, altered steroidogenesis, GR overexpression, neuroendocrine differentiation, tumor microenvironment, and other signaling alterations. AR: Androgen receptor; GR: glucocorticoid receptor; mCRPC: metastatic castration-resistance prostate cancer.
Summary of the completed and ongoing clinical trials of emerging therapies in mCRPC
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| Olaparib | TOPARP-A/NCT01682772[ | II | Olaparib improved the RR specifically in patients with DDR gene defects |
| Olaparib | TOPARP-B/NCT01682772[ | II | Olaparib improved the RR specifically in patients with | |
| Olaparib or ENZ/ABI | PROfound/NCT02987543[ | III | Olaparib increased PFS and OS | |
| Rucaparib | TRITON2/NCT02952534[ | II | Rucaparib improved RR and PSA RR in patients with | |
| Rucaparib or physician’s choice of ABI/ENZ/DOC | TRITON3/NCT02975934 | III | Ongoing trial | |
| Niraparib | GALAHAD/NCT02854436[ | II | Ongoing trial; interim results show that niraparib improved RR in patients with | |
| Talazoparib | TALAPRO-1/NCT03148795[ | II | Ongoing trial; interim results show that talazoparib improved RR in patients with | |
| Talazoparib + ENZ or ENZ | TALAPRO-2/NCT03395197 | III | Ongoing trial | |
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| LuPSMA | [ | II | LuPSMA showed high RR, low toxicity, and reduction of pain in patients |
| LuPSMA or cabazitaxel | TheraP/NCT03392428[ | II | The percentage of patients who achieved PSA50 is higher in the LuPSMA group | |
| LuPSMA + best supportive/best standard of care or best supportive/best standard of care | VISION/NCT03511664[ | III | LuPSMA improved PFS and OS | |
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| CAR+ T cells | NCT01140373[ | I | 3 107 CAR+ T cells/kg was safe with persisting CAR-T cells in peripheral blood for up to two weeks |
| PSMA-targeted/TGFβ-resistant CAR-T cells | NCT03089203[ | I | Ongoing trial | |
| Fully humanized anti-PSMA monoclonal IgG1 antibody conjugated to MMAE PSMA-ADC | NCT01695044[ | II | Discontinued trial as 40% and 31% of the participants showed progressive disease and AEs, respectively | |
| MEDI3726 (PSMA-ADC linked to pyrrolobenzodiazepine) | NCT02991911[ | I | AEs occurred in 91% of the patients and 33% discontinued | |
| MLN2704 (PSMA-ADC with a humanized monoclonal antibody linked to the maytansinoid DM) | [ | I/II | MLN2704 had a low PSA50 response | |
| Pasotuxizumab (AMG 212 or BAY 2010112) | NCT01723475[ | I | AMG 212 had dose-dependent clinical efficacy and manageable safety | |
| Acapatamab (AMG 160) | NCT03792841[ | I | Acapatamab had an acceptable safety profile, promising PSA50 response, stable disease in 8/15 patients, and 14% of the patients continued the treatment for more than 6 months | |
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| ARV-110 | NCT03888612[ | I | Ongoing trial |
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| Ipat (GDC-0068) + ABI or placebo + ABI | NCT01485861[ | Ib/II | Ipat improved PFS and OS |
| Ipat + ABI or placebo + ABI | NCT03072238[ | III | Ongoing trial; interim results show that Ipat prolonged PFS |
ABI: Abiraterone; ADC: antibody-drug conjugate; AEs: adverse events; CAR-T cells: chimeric antigen receptor T cells; DDR: DNA-damage repair; DOC: docetaxel; ENZ: enzalutamide; IgG1: immunoglobulin G1; Ipat: ipatasertib; LuPSMA: lutetium-177[177Lu]-PSMA-617; MMAE: monomethyl auristatin E; OS: overall survival; PARPi: poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor; PFS: progression-free survival; PSA: prostate-specific antigen; PSA50: > 50% decline in prostate-specific antigen; PSMA: prostate-specific membrane antigen; RR: response rate; TGFβ: transforming growth factor-β.