Title: New Technologies and Challenges Targeted Therapies in Cancer
1 New Technologies and Challenges Targeted
Therapies in Cancer
- Ian Olver MD PhD
- CEO The Cancer Council Australia
2Changing of the Guard
- There is a paradigm shift in the treatment of
cancer - Conventional cytotoxic drugs interact with DNA to
prevent cell replication but are not specific to
cancer cells - We are moving to targeted therapies which
specifically target cancer cells as evidenced by
the many presentations at this meeting
3Side Effects of Chemotherapy
- Immediate Early Delayed Late
- (hours - days) (days - weeks) (weeks- months)
(months - yrs) - Extravasation Myelosuppression
Cardiotoxicity Second Cancer - Emesis Mucositis Lung
fibrosis Encephalopathy - Hypersensitivity Alopecia P.
Neuropathy Sterility - Tumour lysis Cystitis Hepatotoxicity
Teratogenicity -
Nephrotoxicity
4Targeted therapies
- With targeted therapy the specific mechanism of
action of the drug results in an increase in its
therapeutic index - However, the advantages of the specificity and
safety of the are offset by the smaller number of
susceptible tumour types - Increasing numbers of these innovative and
expensive anti-cancer drugs may exceed the
capacity of the public purse to pay for them
5The Need to Identify the Target
- Appropriate use of newly approved and expensive
targeted therapies for cancer first depends on
the pathologist identifying the target for
treatment in the tumour sample - Currently the two major classes of targeted
therapy are the small molecule tyrosine kinase
inhibitors (TKIs) and monoclonal antibodies (mAbs)
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7Potential mechanisms of Glivec
- Glivec may inhibit tyrosine kinases in many
tumours, but this will be effective therapy only
where tumour stem cells depend on these enzymes
for survival, growth or metastasis - Tyrosine kinases are part of the signalling
pathways of cells which tell them to grow
8PET Before and after Glivec for GIST
7/12/00
9/1/01
9STI 571 (Glivec)
- Specific inhibitor for BCR-ABL, PDGF receptor and
c-kit tyrosine kinases produced by these genes
which are responsible for growth in CML and GIST - Effective in chronic myeloid leukaemia
- Effective in GIST Gastrointestinal stroma tumours
which over express c-kit - Side effects
- Nausea, myalgia oedema, diarrhoea,
myelosuppression, LFTs early storm
10Monoclonal Antibodies
- Action of the mAbs, rituximab (Mabthera) for NHL
and trastuzumab (Herceptin) for breast cancer
depend on the targets CD20 expression and erbB2
gene being amplified and responsible for growth
11Rituximab
12Mabthera
- Mabthera is an Anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody for
lymphoma - CD20 is a protein on the surface of malignant
lymphoma cells - CD20 expressed on 90 of B-cells in lymphoma
13Mabthera
- Side effects include
- Infusion related fever, chills rigors
- N V, urticaria, pruritis, headache, fatigue,
bronchospasm, hypersensitivity - Rare heart rhythm disturbance
- Low blood counts for up to 30 days
14HER2
- HER2 gene (neu, c-erb-2) ecodes a transmembrane
gycoprotein receptor - HER 2 is over expressed by 1/4 human breast
cancer and correlates with poorer outcome - MoAb against the receptor inhibits the growth of
overexpressing cells
15HER 2
- As a single agent 15 chance of shrinking
metastatic breast cancer, 4 chance of a
complete shrinkage in heavily pretreated patients - Duration of response can be 9 months which is at
least as good as single chemotherapy agents - Can combine with chemotherapy
16Disease-Free SurvivalRomond H et al. Trastuzumab
plus Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Operable
HER2-Positive Breast Cancer NEJM 2005
3531673-1684
AC?TH
87
85
AC?T
75
67
N Events AC?T 1679 261 AC?TH 1672 134
HR0.48, 2P3x10-12
B31/N9831
Years From Randomization
17The Paradigm Shift
- The use of these drugs is giving clinicians a
glimmer of the paradigm shift that will occur in
the treatment of cancer - One or several new targeted therapies offer the
prospect of cancer being treated as a chronic
disease.
18Brain Tumours
- The optimal use of temozolomide chemotherapy for
the treatment of primary brain tumours may depend
on knowing the DNA repair enzyme status of the
tumour - Hegi ME et al. MGMT gene silencing and benefit
from temozolomide in glioblastoma. New Engl J Med
2005 352997-1003
19Dramatic response in female, non-smoking patient
with Broncho-Alveolar Carcinoma
Courtesy Dr T. Lynch, MGH
20Patient demographic factors associated with
outcome in Gefitinib Phase II studies
- Gender
- Females ORR 25 (CI 19-33)
- Males ORR 8 (CI 5-12)
- Ethnicity
- Japanese ORR 27 (CI 19-37)
- Caucasian ORR 11 (CI 6-19)
- Smoking history
- Non-smokers ORR 31 (CI 23-40)
- Smokers ORR 8 (CI 5-12)
-
21Patient demographic factors associated with
outcome in Gefitinib Phase II studies
- Histology
- Adenocarcinoma n275 ORR 19
- Squamous n75 ORR 7
- Undifferentiated n35 ORR 3
- Mixed n26 ORR 4
- Large cell n11 ORR 9
- Unrecorded n3 ORR 0
22EGFR Mutations and Response
- Lynch TJ et al New Engl J Med 350, May 20 2004
- Hypothesis was that a mutation of EGFR accounts
for the response of some patients with NSCLC to
gefitinib - They sequenced the entire coding region of EGFR
in tumors from patients with a response to
gefitinib and in tumors from those without a
response -
23Use of Molecular Methods
- Increase diagnostic accuracy and thereby improve
prognostication - Identify clinically distinct patient subsets to
facilitate rational clinical trial design - Help to optimize current treatments by increasing
their specificity and improving their safety - Identify signaling pathways that define cancer
vulnerabilities and thus create drug targets - Brown M, Buckley M, Rudzki B, Olver I. How can
we turn cancer into a chronic disease that we can
afford to treat? J Intern Med 2006 in press
24Practical Uses of Molecular Pathology and
Targeting
- The decision to treat metastatic breast cancer
depends on the state of the disease - The need for additional treatment after surgery
relies on predicting its behavior, which still
relies on anatomic staging - Tumor size
- Nodal status
- These are prognostic but not predictive of
treatment outcome - However hormone status and HER2 status have been
shown to be both prognostic and predictive and we
have had targeted hormonal therapy for decades
25Molecular Classification
- With technology that can rapidly measure multiple
gene expression profiles it has been found that - They correlate with microscopic observed
difference e.g. one pattern of genes correlates
with grade (Perou CM et al Nature, 2000, 406
letter 749-52, 2000) - They differ across tumors defined by hormone and
HER2 status - Breast Cancer can be subtyped
26Sorlie T et al Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001,
981086910874. 85 samples gene expression
patterns analyzed by hierarchical clustering.
Green is normal breast, red is the basal poor
prognosis group Can use to predict prognosis and
outcome of therapy and can target the therapy
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32Conclusions
- Targeted therapies which improve
- the therapeutic index are the future
- of anti-cancer therapy
- Advances in molecular pathology will provide the
means to identify the targets and will be used to
subtype tumours and will provide predict response
to therapy and provide prognostic information