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Antitumor Activity of Rapamycin in a Phase I Trial for Patients with Recurrent PTEN-Deficient Glioblastoma

BACKGROUND: There is much discussion in the cancer drug development community about how to incorporate molecular tools into early-stage clinical trials to assess target modulation, measure anti-tumor activity, and enrich the clinical trial population for patients who are more likely to benefit. Smal...

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Autores principales: Cloughesy, Tim F, Yoshimoto, Koji, Nghiemphu, Phioanh, Brown, Kevin, Dang, Julie, Zhu, Shaojun, Hsueh, Teli, Chen, Yinan, Wang, Wei, Youngkin, David, Liau, Linda, Martin, Neil, Becker, Don, Bergsneider, Marvin, Lai, Albert, Green, Richard, Oglesby, Tom, Koleto, Michael, Trent, Jeff, Horvath, Steve, Mischel, Paul S, Mellinghoff, Ingo K, Sawyers, Charles L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2211560/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18215105
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0050008
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author Cloughesy, Tim F
Yoshimoto, Koji
Nghiemphu, Phioanh
Brown, Kevin
Dang, Julie
Zhu, Shaojun
Hsueh, Teli
Chen, Yinan
Wang, Wei
Youngkin, David
Liau, Linda
Martin, Neil
Becker, Don
Bergsneider, Marvin
Lai, Albert
Green, Richard
Oglesby, Tom
Koleto, Michael
Trent, Jeff
Horvath, Steve
Mischel, Paul S
Mellinghoff, Ingo K
Sawyers, Charles L
author_facet Cloughesy, Tim F
Yoshimoto, Koji
Nghiemphu, Phioanh
Brown, Kevin
Dang, Julie
Zhu, Shaojun
Hsueh, Teli
Chen, Yinan
Wang, Wei
Youngkin, David
Liau, Linda
Martin, Neil
Becker, Don
Bergsneider, Marvin
Lai, Albert
Green, Richard
Oglesby, Tom
Koleto, Michael
Trent, Jeff
Horvath, Steve
Mischel, Paul S
Mellinghoff, Ingo K
Sawyers, Charles L
author_sort Cloughesy, Tim F
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: There is much discussion in the cancer drug development community about how to incorporate molecular tools into early-stage clinical trials to assess target modulation, measure anti-tumor activity, and enrich the clinical trial population for patients who are more likely to benefit. Small, molecularly focused clinical studies offer the promise of the early definition of optimal biologic dose and patient population. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Based on preclinical evidence that phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on Chromosome 10 (PTEN) loss sensitizes tumors to the inhibition of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), we conducted a proof-of-concept Phase I neoadjuvant trial of rapamycin in patients with recurrent glioblastoma, whose tumors lacked expression of the tumor suppressor PTEN. We aimed to assess the safety profile of daily rapamycin in patients with glioma, define the dose of rapamycin required for mTOR inhibition in tumor tissue, and evaluate the antiproliferative activity of rapamycin in PTEN-deficient glioblastoma. Although intratumoral rapamycin concentrations that were sufficient to inhibit mTOR in vitro were achieved in all patients, the magnitude of mTOR inhibition in tumor cells (measured by reduced ribosomal S6 protein phosphorylation) varied substantially. Tumor cell proliferation (measured by Ki-67 staining) was dramatically reduced in seven of 14 patients after 1 wk of rapamycin treatment and was associated with the magnitude of mTOR inhibition (p = 0.0047, Fisher exact test) but not the intratumoral rapamycin concentration. Tumor cells harvested from the Ki-67 nonresponders retained sensitivity to rapamycin ex vivo, indicating that clinical resistance to biochemical mTOR inhibition was not cell-intrinsic. Rapamycin treatment led to Akt activation in seven patients, presumably due to loss of negative feedback, and this activation was associated with shorter time-to-progression during post-surgical maintenance rapamycin therapy (p < 0.05, Logrank test). CONCLUSIONS: Rapamycin has anticancer activity in PTEN-deficient glioblastoma and warrants further clinical study alone or in combination with PI3K pathway inhibitors. The short-term treatment endpoints used in this neoadjuvant trial design identified the importance of monitoring target inhibition and negative feedback to guide future clinical development. Trial registration: http://www.ClinicalTrials.gov (#NCT00047073).
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spelling pubmed-22115602008-01-23 Antitumor Activity of Rapamycin in a Phase I Trial for Patients with Recurrent PTEN-Deficient Glioblastoma Cloughesy, Tim F Yoshimoto, Koji Nghiemphu, Phioanh Brown, Kevin Dang, Julie Zhu, Shaojun Hsueh, Teli Chen, Yinan Wang, Wei Youngkin, David Liau, Linda Martin, Neil Becker, Don Bergsneider, Marvin Lai, Albert Green, Richard Oglesby, Tom Koleto, Michael Trent, Jeff Horvath, Steve Mischel, Paul S Mellinghoff, Ingo K Sawyers, Charles L PLoS Med Research Article BACKGROUND: There is much discussion in the cancer drug development community about how to incorporate molecular tools into early-stage clinical trials to assess target modulation, measure anti-tumor activity, and enrich the clinical trial population for patients who are more likely to benefit. Small, molecularly focused clinical studies offer the promise of the early definition of optimal biologic dose and patient population. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Based on preclinical evidence that phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on Chromosome 10 (PTEN) loss sensitizes tumors to the inhibition of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), we conducted a proof-of-concept Phase I neoadjuvant trial of rapamycin in patients with recurrent glioblastoma, whose tumors lacked expression of the tumor suppressor PTEN. We aimed to assess the safety profile of daily rapamycin in patients with glioma, define the dose of rapamycin required for mTOR inhibition in tumor tissue, and evaluate the antiproliferative activity of rapamycin in PTEN-deficient glioblastoma. Although intratumoral rapamycin concentrations that were sufficient to inhibit mTOR in vitro were achieved in all patients, the magnitude of mTOR inhibition in tumor cells (measured by reduced ribosomal S6 protein phosphorylation) varied substantially. Tumor cell proliferation (measured by Ki-67 staining) was dramatically reduced in seven of 14 patients after 1 wk of rapamycin treatment and was associated with the magnitude of mTOR inhibition (p = 0.0047, Fisher exact test) but not the intratumoral rapamycin concentration. Tumor cells harvested from the Ki-67 nonresponders retained sensitivity to rapamycin ex vivo, indicating that clinical resistance to biochemical mTOR inhibition was not cell-intrinsic. Rapamycin treatment led to Akt activation in seven patients, presumably due to loss of negative feedback, and this activation was associated with shorter time-to-progression during post-surgical maintenance rapamycin therapy (p < 0.05, Logrank test). CONCLUSIONS: Rapamycin has anticancer activity in PTEN-deficient glioblastoma and warrants further clinical study alone or in combination with PI3K pathway inhibitors. The short-term treatment endpoints used in this neoadjuvant trial design identified the importance of monitoring target inhibition and negative feedback to guide future clinical development. Trial registration: http://www.ClinicalTrials.gov (#NCT00047073). Public Library of Science 2008-01 2008-01-22 /pmc/articles/PMC2211560/ /pubmed/18215105 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0050008 Text en : © 2008 Cloughesy et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cloughesy, Tim F
Yoshimoto, Koji
Nghiemphu, Phioanh
Brown, Kevin
Dang, Julie
Zhu, Shaojun
Hsueh, Teli
Chen, Yinan
Wang, Wei
Youngkin, David
Liau, Linda
Martin, Neil
Becker, Don
Bergsneider, Marvin
Lai, Albert
Green, Richard
Oglesby, Tom
Koleto, Michael
Trent, Jeff
Horvath, Steve
Mischel, Paul S
Mellinghoff, Ingo K
Sawyers, Charles L
Antitumor Activity of Rapamycin in a Phase I Trial for Patients with Recurrent PTEN-Deficient Glioblastoma
title Antitumor Activity of Rapamycin in a Phase I Trial for Patients with Recurrent PTEN-Deficient Glioblastoma
title_full Antitumor Activity of Rapamycin in a Phase I Trial for Patients with Recurrent PTEN-Deficient Glioblastoma
title_fullStr Antitumor Activity of Rapamycin in a Phase I Trial for Patients with Recurrent PTEN-Deficient Glioblastoma
title_full_unstemmed Antitumor Activity of Rapamycin in a Phase I Trial for Patients with Recurrent PTEN-Deficient Glioblastoma
title_short Antitumor Activity of Rapamycin in a Phase I Trial for Patients with Recurrent PTEN-Deficient Glioblastoma
title_sort antitumor activity of rapamycin in a phase i trial for patients with recurrent pten-deficient glioblastoma
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2211560/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18215105
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0050008
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