Addressing the rarity and complexities of sarcomas
Citation JCSO 2018;16(4):e210-e215
©2018 Frontline Medical Communications
doi https://doi.org/10.12788/jcso.0418
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Repurposing gynecologic cancer drugs
More recently, a third group of sarcomas was categorized, with intermediate genomic complexity. These tumors, including well/dedifferentiated liposarcomas, were characterized by amplifications of chromosome 12, involving genes such as cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4). In fact, more than 90% of patients with well/dedifferentiated sarcomas display CDK4 amplification, making it a logical therapeutic target.36
CDK4 encodes CDK4 protein, a cell cycle-associated protein that regulates the transition from G1-S phase, known as the restriction point, beyond which the cell commits to undergoing mitosis. Aberrant expression of CDK4 in cancer drives the hallmark process of unchecked cellular proliferation.
Some small molecule CDK4/6 inhibitors have been developed and have shown significant promise in the treatment of breast cancer. They are also being evaluatedin patients with sarcoma whose tumors display CDK4 overexpression. In a recently published phase 2 trial of palbociclib in 60 patients with well/dedifferentiated liposarcomas, there was 1 CR.37
,Another group of drugs that has advanced the treatment of gynecologic cancers comprises the poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors. In this context, PARP inhibitors are used in patients with mutations in the breast cancer susceptibility genes, BRCA1/2. The BRCA and PARP proteins are both involved in DNA repair pathways and the inhibition of PARP in patients who already have a defective BRCA pathway renders a lethal double blow to the cancer cell. According to the Broad Institute Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia, Ewing sarcomas express high levels of the PARP1 enzyme, which could render them sensitive to PARP inhibition. Preclinical studies seemed to confirm that sensitivity, however, so far this has yet to translate into success in clinical trials, with no objective responses observed as yet.38
Expanding the field
Other treatment strategies being tested in patients with sarcoma are moving the field beyond conventional targeted therapies. There has been substantial focus in recent years on epigenetic alterations and their potential role in the development of cancer. Epigenetics is the secondary layer of regulation that acts on the genome and directs the spatial and temporal expression of genes.
Both DNA and the histone proteins they are packaged up with to form chromatin in nondividing cells can be modified by the attachment of chemical groups, such as acetyl and methyl groups, which can alter access to the DNA for transcription.
EZH2 is an enzyme that participates in histone methylation and thereby regulates transcriptional repression. Some types of sarcoma are characterized by a loss of expression of the INI1 gene, also known as SMARCB1. The INI1 protein is part of a chromatin remodeling complex that relieves transcriptional repression and when INI1 is lost, cells become dependent upon EZH2.39Clinical trials of the EZH2 inhibitor tazemetostat are ongoing in several types of sarcoma. Results from a phase 2 study in adults with INI1-negative tumors were presented at ASCO in 2017. Among 31 patients treated with 800 mg tazemetostat in continuous 28-day cycles, mPFS was 5.7 months, disease control rate was 10%, and confirmed overall response rate was 13%. The FDA has granted tazemetostat orphan drug designation in this indication.40A pediatric basket trial of tazemetostat is also ongoing, but the FDA recently placed it under a clinical hold as a result of a safety update from the trial in which a pediatric patient with advanced poorly differentiated chordoma developed a secondary T-cell lymphoma.41
Targeting the unique metabolism of sarcomas may offer a promising therapeutic strategy, although this is in the preliminary stages of evaluation. A recent study showed that the expression of the argininosuccinate synthase 1 enzyme, which is involved in the generation of arginine through the urea cycle, was lost in up to 90% of STS. A pegylated arginine deaminase (ADI-PEG20), is being evaluated in a phase 2 clinical trial.42
Finally, the concept of using immunotherapy to boost the anti-tumor immune response is also being examined in sarcomas. A significant number of cases of STS, osteosarcoma and GIST have been shown to express programmed cell death protein-ligand 1, therefore the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors that block this ligand or its receptor and help to reactive tumor-infiltrating T cells, could be a beneficial strategy.
Limited activity has been observed in studies conducted to date, however combination therapies, especially with inhibitors of the indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) enzyme, which plays a key role in immunosuppression, could help to harness the power of these drugs. Studies have suggested that sarcomas may be infiltrated by immunosuppressive macrophages that express IDO.43
It is generally believed that immunotherapy is most effective in tumors that are highly mutated because that allows a large number of cancer antigens to provoke an anti-tumor immune response. However, a single highly expressed antigen can also be strongly immunogenic. Synovial sarcomas have a relatively low mutational burden but they do express high levels of the cancer testis antigen NY-ESO-1.
NY-ESO-1 has provided a useful target for the development of adoptive cell therapies and vaccines for the treatment of sarcomas. CMB305 is an NY-ESO-1 vaccine that also incorporates a toll-like receptor 4 agonist. It is being evaluated in the phase 3 Synovate study as maintenance monotherapy in patients with locally advanced, unresectable or metastatic synovial sarcoma. In a phase 1 study, at a median follow-up of just under 18 months, the median OS for all 25 patients was 23.7 months.44