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Chemotherapeutic Treatment Options for Triple Negative Breast Cancer Lauren Barney April 17, 2013 Peyton Lab Breast Cancer Subtypes • Breast cancer is classified into clinical subtypes based upon receptor expression • These subtypes dictate possible therapeutic options and vary in their prognosis – Luminal: derived from the luminal cells • ER+, PR+ • Can use hormonal therapy • Less aggressive Luminal A – Basal: derived from myoepithelial cells • ER-, PR• No specific target for therapies • More aggressive Luminal B – HER2-enriched • More aggressive ER: estrogen receptor PR: progesterone receptor HER2: human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 Claudin-Low Basal HER2-enriched Peyton Lab Luminal and Basal Characteristics Basement membrane Basal Luminal • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Low ER Low HER2 High CK5/6 c-KIT higher High EGFR High p53 mutation High p53 protein High cyclin E Very high vimentin • • • High ER Higher HER2 Low CK5/6 Low c-KIT Low EGFR Low p53 mutation Low p53 protein Low cyclin E Low vimentin Myoepithelial Cells Basal Luminal Cells Luminal Peyton Lab Triple Negative Breast Cancer • 15-25% of all breast cancer, but much higher proportion of all breast cancer mortality • Lack ER, PR and HER2 – no targeted therapies • Much more aggressive – Younger age at diagnosis, high grade, large tumor size, aggressive relapse • High proliferation, poor differentiation, basal marker (cytokeratin 5/6) expression, and aggressive clinical course, with early relapse and decreased survival • TN tumors have specific morphologic characteristics: elevated mitotic count, tumor necrosis, pushing margin of invasion, and stromal lymphocytic response and high nuclear-cytoplasmic ratio Peyton Lab TN vs Basal Subtypes • The terms triple negative and basal are often used interchangeably in breast cancer subtyping. – Triple negative denotes the lack of ER, PR and HER2 receptors (clinical observation) – Basal describes the tumors that overexpress those genes that characterized breast basal epithelial cells based on gene expression – These often overlap! • Basal-like breast cancer is characterized by certain features that include the TN phenotype, but TN and basal-like are not synonymous terms. A discordance of up to 30% has been described between the two groups. Peyton Lab Treatments can be targeted for cancers that express hormonal receptors or HER2; TN remains a clinical challenge. • Hormonal therapy: blocks estrogen activity – Tamoxifen, ER antagonist – Competitively binds to ER & inhibits estrogen effects • HER2 targeted therapy – Herceptin & others • These targeted therapies work really well! • There is no specific target on TN cells! Must use cytotoxic chemotherapeutics, surgery, radiation. Tamoxifen Peyton Lab Current Options for TNBC • Standard course of treatment is very aggressive: surgery with adjuvant and neoadjuvant chemotherapy and radiation therapy – Neoadjuvant: administration of a drug before a main treatment – increases rate of breast conserving therapies and helps to understand a patient’s response to drugs – Adjuvant: any therapy given after primary therapy – used when there is a high risk of recurrence • The search is on for specific targets! Peyton Lab TNBC Treatment • Chemotherapy typically includes combinations of taxanes (T), anthracyclines (A), and oxazophorines (C) – Taxanes: disrupt microtubules & inhibit cell division • Paclitaxel, docetaxel – Anthracyclines: most effective chemotherapeutics! • Three mechanisms: inhibit DNA and RNA synthesis, blocks transcription and replication, creates oxygen free radicals • Daunorubicin, doxorubicin, epirubicin, idarubicin – Oxazophorine: DNA alkylating agent • Cyclophosphamide (C) Peyton Lab Taxane and Anthracycline Based Therapy • Typical regimens: – AC-T: doxorubicin plus cyclophosphamide every 2 weeks for four cycles followed by docetaxel every 2 weeks for 4 cycles • Investigating taxol before AC (not standard therapy) – TAC: docetaxel, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide every 3 weeks for 6 cycles • Different dosing regimens, frequencies can help to improve efficacy – Dense dosing is better (more frequent doses are better) Peyton Lab CMF therapy may actually reduce recurrence of TNBC compared to anthracycline or taxane-based treatment • CMF is a much older therapeutic regimen than TAC or AC-T • Cyclophosphamide (alkylating agent, oxazophorine) • Methotrexate (antimetabolite, stops cell growth & division) • Fluorouracil (called 5FU; pyrimidine analog, antimetabolite) • Many different dosing schedules possible Peyton Lab TN Tumors are Chemosensitive • Recently, studies have shown that TNBC is more responsive to anthracycline or anthracycline/taxane chemotherapy than Luminal subtypes – Patients who had a complete response to chemotherapy had good prognosis regardless of subtype • Despite this, TNBC patients still have a worse distant disease free-survival and a poor prognosis – Result of high likelihood of relapse in TNBC • HER2+ subtype has a similar response to TNBC Peyton Lab Beyond brute force chemo: What are some potential treatment options for TNBC? • Current and developing therapies – Many in clinical trials – Most target proliferative pathways • Targets: General proliferation, surface molecules, secondary messengers Peyton Lab Potential Systemic Targets for TNBC Peyton Lab Platinum Agents • Platinum agents can bind to DNA and cause cross-linking to occur cell death • Cisplatin, carboplatin and oxaplatin are approved for some types of cancers and are being studied as treatments for TNBC Peyton Lab PARP Inhibitors • PARP: poly ADP ribose polymerase – Involved in DNA repair by detecting singlestrand breaks – Can be activated in cells with damaged DNA • Several types of cancer are more dependent on PARP, so it can be a good therapeutic target • PARP inhibitors prevent breaks from being repaired, causing cell death. Peyton Lab Anti-EGFR • EGFR is overexpressed in 45-70% of TNBC • Cetuximab is an anti-EGFR antibody used to treat metastatic cancer – Breast cancer patients with metastatic disease respond twice as well when Cetuximab is added • Other treatments include tyrosine kinase inhibitors (erlotinib, gefitinib) – Gefitinib is the only one currently approved for breast cancer, but the others are in clinical trials • Inhibits an important signaling pathway and provides a specific target! Peyton Lab Angiogenesis in Cancer • Angiogenesis: formation of new blood vessels. – Tumors need blood vessels to grow and spread. • Angiogenesis inhibitors prevent the formation of new blood vessels, thereby stopping or slowing the growth or spread of tumors. Peyton Lab Anti-Angiogenesis • Bevacizumab (Avastin) – Monoclonal antibody to VEGF – Improves survival in breast cancer patients with combined with Taxol – Approved for metastatic breast cancer but benefit isn’t subtype specific – this has since been revoked because it slowed progression but didn’t extend length or quality of life and had many adverse effects • Metronomic chemotherapy: repeated, low, less than toxic doses can destroy endothelial cells and prevent angiogenesis, slowing tumor growth – works in clinical trials Peyton Lab Androgen Receptor • Nuclear receptor activated by binding testosterone or dihydrotestosterone – Closely related to PR • Expressed in 75% of breast cancer and 10-20% of TNBC – TNBC that express AR are molecularly similar to prostate cancer and could potentially be treated similarly. • Bicalutamine: anti-androgen used to treat prostate cancer • 17-DMAG: semi-synthetic antibiotic derivative, has shown promise in clinical trials • Enzalutamide: androgen agonist used to treat prostate cancer; is in Phase II for TNBC Peyton Lab RTK Inhibitors • Suninitib (Sutent) – Multiple-target RTK inhibitor • All PDGFRs and VEGFRs • KIT (CD17) which drives the majority of all GI stromal tumors & several others • Imatinib (Gleevec) – Prevents phosphorolation of BCR-Abl, inhibiting signaling pathways necessary for cancer cell growth • BCR-Abl: Exists only in cancer cells! • Worked in vitro; no effect on metastatic breast cancer patients in Phase II Peyton Lab Src Tyrosine Kinase • Src is overexpressed in breast cancer • Dasatinib: multiple tyrosine kinase inhibitor approved for CML – Possible efficacy in breast cancer - small effect seen in Phase II – In vitro: basal breast cancer cells were more sensitive! • Several others in trials also seem to have promising preclinical activity Peyton Lab mTOR • Cell cycle regulator and a downstream effector in the PI3K/PTEN/AKT pathway • PTEN is often mutated in TNBC, leading to increased AKT and mTOR activation • Everolimus and temsirolimus block mTOR function and inhibit proliferation – Everolimus is approved for some types of cancers currently in clinical trials for TNBC in combination with chemotherapy – Temsirolimus is approved for renal cell carcinoma and completed a Phase II trial with promising results Peyton Lab Other possible therapeutic options • Hsp90 (heat shock protein 90) – upregulated in response to stress signals; regulates and stabilizes many key proteins, including downstream targets of p53, PI3K, AKT and EGFR – can be recruited to ‘protect’ oncogenic proteins, leading to protein overexpression • HDAC (Histone deacetylase) – can effect epigenetics and cause re-expression of epigenetically silenced genes Peyton Lab Other ways to sensitize cells to chemotherapy • Inhibition of TGF-beta sensitizes to chemo • TRAIL: Lexatumumab (monoclonal antibody in clinical trials) – TRAIL controls proliferation & induces apoptosis • Chk1 (checkpoint kinase 1): involved in cell cycle control. – Inhibition sensitizes proliferating tumor cells to chemotherapies that damage DNA Peyton Lab Mutations that Could be Targeted • p53 (75% of TNBC) – complex, so target downstream components of pathway • Myc (40% of TNBC) • Loss of retinoblastoma gene (20% of TNBC) • Mutation in BRCA1 or BCRA2 (15-20% of TNBC) • Rare: – – – – PTEN PIK3CA Amplification of HER2 Amplification of FGFR2 Peyton Lab We need to get creative: changes in formulation • EndoTAG®-1: formulation of paclitaxel combined with neutral and positive lipids – Interacts with newly developing and negatively charged endothelial cells that are forming new blood vessels – Attacks the activated endothelial cells as they divide – Targets blood supply to tumors without affecting healthy tissue – Prevents angiogenesis and inhibits tumor growth!! Peyton Lab What’s in clinical trials now? • New compounds • New drug combinations or dosing regimens • New formulations Interesting Current Clinical Trials • Re-expression of ER in Triple Negative Breast Cancers • Bevacizumab, Metronomic Chemotherapy (CM), Diet and Exercise After Preoperative Chemotherapy for Breast Cancer • Laboratory-Treated T Cells After Chemotherapy in Treating Women With Stage II or Stage III Breast Cancer Undergoing Surgery • Preoperative Clinical Trial of Sorafenib in Combination With Cisplatin Followed by Paclitaxel for Triple Negative (ER-, PR-, Her2-) Early Stage Breast Cancer Peyton Lab Recent news stories • March 18, 2013 - Copper depletion shows early success in triple-negative breast cancer • April 8, 2013 – Paragazole (HDAC) excels in preclinical models of triple-negative breast cancer • April 12, 2013 - Omega-3 Fatty Acids Slow Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Cell Proliferation • April 15, 2013 - Nanodiamonds could improve effectiveness of breast cancer treatment Peyton Lab Outlook for now and future • Need targeted therapies, new formulations to be able to treat TNBC – Combination therapies will be necessary because tumors are heterogeneous and can change – Also need to attack tumors from all sides – Reaching complete remission and preventing recurrence are key Peyton Lab References • A. Bosch et al. Cancer Treatment Reviews 36 (2010) 206–215 • Cleator et al. Triple-negative breast cancer: therapeutic options. Lancet Oncol 2007; 8: 235–44 • Pal et al. Triple negative breast cancer: unmet medical needs. Breast Cancer Res Treat (2011) 125:627–636 • Crown et al. Emerging targeted therapies in triple-negative breast cancer. Annals of Oncology 23 (Supplement 6): vi56–vi65, 2012 • Oncology (Williston Park). 2008 October ; 22(11): 1233–1243. • Hudis and Gianni. Triple-Negative Breast Cancer: An Unmet Medical Need. The Oncologist 2011, 16:1-11. doi: 10.1634/theoncologist.2011-S1-01 • Lisa A. Carey, E. Claire Dees, Lynda Sawyer, et al. Clin Cancer Res 2007;13:2329-2334. • Turner N et al. Targeting triple negative breast cancer: Is p53 the answer? Cancer Treat Rev (2013), http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1016/j.ctrv.2012.12.001