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Old 05-11-2010, 10:20 PM   #1
Joe
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IMPAKT: Solutions Possible for Anti-HER2 Drug Resistance
By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today
Published: May 11, 2010
Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston and
Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner
BRUSSELS -- Acquired resistance to HER2-targeted agents in breast cancer may be surmountable, based on new mechanistic clues, British researchers indicated.
Newer and novel agents that attack more types of HER receptors, such as lapatinib (Tykerb) or neratinib, could solve the problem of activation of alternative HER receptors via a negative feedback loop, according to a study led by Merel Gijsen, of the University of Oxford.
Another step in the loop -- ADAM17, which leads to activation of other HER receptors -- may also be a target through an experimental ADAM inhibitor, they reported here at the IMPAKT Breast Cancer Conference.
In a separate session at the conference, José Baselga, MD, of the Vall d'Hebron University Hospital in Barcelona, Spain, explained that resistance to trastuzumab (Herceptin) is no surprise. The emerging picture is one of a complex pathway with multiple places from which resistance can arise, he said.
Increasingly solid data suggest that about a third of the patients with HER2-positive tumors don't have the binding site trastuzumab would attack because of a truncated form of HER2 called p95. These fragments, which can be coexpressed with normal HER2 receptors, appear to be "bad actors," with more tumorogenic and more aggressive characteristics toward the tumors in which they are found, Baselga said. But this problem might be overcome by use of lapatinib, the subject of a study that is starting now, he said.
One mystery had been why trastuzumab is effective against HER2-overexpressing cancer but doesn't eliminate HER2 phosphorylation, which shows that the signaling pathway is activated, Gijsen said.
Her group showed that this is maintained by other HER receptors via upregulation of HER ligands. In a mouse cell line model of HER2+ breast cancer, levels of the HER2 and HER3 receptor activator heregulin rose with trastuzumab treatment, compared with untreated cells (P=0.0152 to P=0.0427).
This upregulation in turn was mediated by ADAM17, which almost doubled its relative gene expression level in the presence of trastuzumab in the same cell line (P=0.008). Combining ADAM17 inhibitors and trastuzumab dropped HER2 phosphorylation.
Inhibiting protein kinase B (PKB, also known as AKT), as trastuzumab does, increased heregulin (P=0.0127) and ADAM17 (P=0.016). Using an experimental agent that blocks all the HER receptors, either alone or in combination with trastuzumab, eliminated the rise in heregulin (P=0.42 and P=0.73 versus untreated, respectively) and ADAM17 (P=0.39 and P=0.09 versus untreated, respectively).
Based on these results, the researchers proposed that trastuzumab should be combined with a panHER inhibitor or ADAM inhibitor to overcome acquired drug resistance in this population, although no drug in either class is available commercially. Another mechanism of resistance that might be countered with drugs in the future is overexpression of cyclin E, for which CKD inhibitors could be effective, Baselga said.
However, he noted that loss of HER2 sensitivity can occur in tumors too.
"I'm not sure we can intervene, but we can monitor," he said.

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