Huang Tiffany T, Sarkaria Shawn M, Cloughesy Timothy F, Mischel Paul S
Departments of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine and Molecular & Medical Pharmacology, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90095.
Neurotherapeutics. 2009 Jul;6(3):500-12. doi: 10.1016/j.nurt.2009.04.008.
Molecularly targeted therapies are transforming the care of patients with malignant gliomas, including glioblastoma, the most common malignant primary brain tumor of adults. With an arsenal of small molecule inhibitors and antibodies that target key components of the signal transduction machinery that are commonly activated in gliomas, neuro-oncologists and neurosurgeons are poised to transform the care of these patients. Nonetheless, successful application of targeted therapies remains a challenge. Strategies are lacking for directing kinase inhibitor or other pathway-specific therapies to individual patients most likely to benefit. In addition, response to targeted agents is determined not only by the presence of the key mutant kinases, but also by other critical changes in the molecular circuitry of cancer cells, such as loss of key tumor suppressor proteins, the selection for kinase-resistant mutants, and the deregulation of feedback loops. Understanding these signaling networks, and studying them in patients, will be critical for developing rational combination therapies to suppress resistance for malignant glioma patients. Here we review the current status of molecular targeted therapies for malignant gliomas. We focus initially on identifying some of the insights gained to date from targeting the EGFR/PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway in patients and on how this has led toward a reconceptualization of some of the challenges and directions for targeted treatment. We describe how advances from the world of genomics have the potential to transform our approaches toward targeted therapy, and describe how a deeper understanding of the complex nature of cancer, and its adeptness at rewiring molecular circuitry to evade targeted agents, has raised new challenges and identified new leads.
分子靶向疗法正在改变恶性胶质瘤患者的治疗方式,恶性胶质瘤包括胶质母细胞瘤,这是成人中最常见的原发性恶性脑肿瘤。有了一系列针对胶质瘤中通常被激活的信号转导机制关键成分的小分子抑制剂和抗体,神经肿瘤学家和神经外科医生有望改变这些患者的治疗方式。尽管如此,靶向疗法的成功应用仍然是一项挑战。目前缺乏将激酶抑制剂或其他通路特异性疗法应用于最可能受益的个体患者的策略。此外,对靶向药物的反应不仅取决于关键突变激酶的存在,还取决于癌细胞分子回路中的其他关键变化,如关键肿瘤抑制蛋白的缺失、激酶抗性突变体的选择以及反馈回路的失调。了解这些信号网络,并在患者中进行研究,对于开发合理的联合疗法以抑制恶性胶质瘤患者的耐药性至关重要。在此,我们综述恶性胶质瘤分子靶向疗法的现状。我们首先关注迄今从针对患者的表皮生长因子受体/磷脂酰肌醇-3激酶/蛋白激酶B/哺乳动物雷帕霉素靶蛋白(EGFR/PI3K/Akt/mTOR)信号通路中获得的一些见解,以及这如何导致对靶向治疗的一些挑战和方向的重新认识。我们描述了基因组学领域的进展如何有可能改变我们的靶向治疗方法,并描述了对癌症复杂本质及其重新布线分子回路以逃避靶向药物的能力的更深入理解如何带来了新的挑战并确定了新的线索。