Pavlaki Maria, Zucker Stanley
Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York 11794, USA.
Cancer Metastasis Rev. 2003 Jun-Sep;22(2-3):177-203. doi: 10.1023/a:1023047431869.
The decade of the 1990s was ripe with enthusiasm for the use of MMPIs to treat cancer. Limitations to new cytotoxic chemotherapy approaches to treat solid cancers and a better understanding of tumor biology provided a strong impetus for alternative drug development. It is estimated that the pharmaceutical industry invested at least a billion dollars in this effort. Because MMPIs represent an entirely different therapeutic modality from proven anti-cancer agents, many of the therapeutic trials designed to test MMPIs in human patients with cancer bypassed traditional approaches to evaluate drug efficiency. The concept of systematic progression from small phase I (dose escalation to toxicity to examine drug safety), to phase II (drug treatment of patients with cancer types considered to be good candidates for the selected drug), to phase III (randomized trial of new drug versus best available therapy to determine drug efficacy) trials was modified. Much to the chagrin of everyone involved in these studies, the randomized trials of MMPIs in advanced cancer have, pretty much, flopped. This review article will attempt to dissect out aspects of previous human and animal studies that may be helpful in making decisions about the future of MMPI drug development for the treatment of cancer. The important questions to be addressed in this report are: What are the lessons that we have learned from preclinical (animal models) and clinical studies of MMPIs in cancer? Are we ready to abandon MMPIs as a therapeutic modality in cancer (termination of phase III trials) or do we need to have a better understanding of the myriad effects of MMPs in cancer before we proceed to develop different types of drugs that alter MMP activity in patients with cancer (beginning of new phase I trials)?
20世纪90年代,人们对使用基质金属蛋白酶抑制剂(MMPIs)治疗癌症充满热情。用于治疗实体癌的新型细胞毒性化疗方法存在局限性,同时对肿瘤生物学有了更深入的了解,这为替代药物的开发提供了强大动力。据估计,制药行业在这项工作上至少投入了10亿美元。由于MMPIs代表了一种与已证实的抗癌药物完全不同的治疗方式,许多旨在在癌症患者中测试MMPIs的治疗试验绕过了评估药物疗效的传统方法。从小规模I期试验(剂量递增至毒性以检查药物安全性)到II期试验(对被认为是所选药物良好候选者的癌症类型患者进行药物治疗),再到III期试验(新药与最佳可用疗法的随机试验以确定药物疗效)的系统进展概念被修改。令参与这些研究的每个人懊恼的是,MMPIs在晚期癌症中的随机试验几乎都失败了。这篇综述文章将试图剖析先前人类和动物研究的各个方面,这些方面可能有助于就MMPIs用于癌症治疗的未来发展做出决策。本报告要解决的重要问题是:我们从MMPIs在癌症中的临床前(动物模型)和临床研究中学到了什么?我们是否准备好放弃MMPIs作为癌症治疗方式(终止III期试验),还是在开发改变癌症患者MMP活性的不同类型药物之前(开始新的I期试验),我们需要更好地了解MMPs在癌症中的多种作用?