During the last 10 years, the concept of targeted biological therapy for the treatment of cancer has emerged. Targeted agents entered clinical practice only recently, and the first drugs with demonstrated clinical efficacy were mainly inhibitors of the ErbB family of receptors (i.e., EGFR and HER-2), either monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) or tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). After the proof of concept for the clinical efficacy and tolerability of these selective agents, it was conceived that most tumors will depend on more than one signaling pathway for their growth and survival. As a consequence, different strategies were pursued to inhibit multiple signaling pathways or multiple steps in the same pathway, either by the development of multi-targeted agents or the combination of single targeted drugs. The recent FDA and EMEA approval of sorafenib and sunitinib, both multi-targeted TKIs, marked the coming of age of this new generation of drugs. Now a whole new wave of multi-targeted compounds is moving into clinical trials, raising in the minds of investigators important questions about the best strategies to pursue in their use and many doubts about their differences and the seeming redundancies in the pipelines of pharmaceutical companies. This review will deal with the rationale underlying the multi-targeted approach and with the available clinical experience with multi-targeted agents, especially focusing on molecules with anti- EGFR mechanisms of action.

Rationale and clinical results of multi-target treatments in oncology / A. Sartore-Bianchi, R. Ricotta, G. Cerea, M.R. Maugeri, S. Siena. - In: THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MARKERS. - ISSN 0393-6155. - 22:1 Suppl 4(2007 Mar), pp. S77-S87.

Rationale and clinical results of multi-target treatments in oncology

A. Sartore-Bianchi;S. Siena
Ultimo
2007

Abstract

During the last 10 years, the concept of targeted biological therapy for the treatment of cancer has emerged. Targeted agents entered clinical practice only recently, and the first drugs with demonstrated clinical efficacy were mainly inhibitors of the ErbB family of receptors (i.e., EGFR and HER-2), either monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) or tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). After the proof of concept for the clinical efficacy and tolerability of these selective agents, it was conceived that most tumors will depend on more than one signaling pathway for their growth and survival. As a consequence, different strategies were pursued to inhibit multiple signaling pathways or multiple steps in the same pathway, either by the development of multi-targeted agents or the combination of single targeted drugs. The recent FDA and EMEA approval of sorafenib and sunitinib, both multi-targeted TKIs, marked the coming of age of this new generation of drugs. Now a whole new wave of multi-targeted compounds is moving into clinical trials, raising in the minds of investigators important questions about the best strategies to pursue in their use and many doubts about their differences and the seeming redundancies in the pipelines of pharmaceutical companies. This review will deal with the rationale underlying the multi-targeted approach and with the available clinical experience with multi-targeted agents, especially focusing on molecules with anti- EGFR mechanisms of action.
targeted therapy; tyrosine kinase inhibitors; EGFR; VEGF; benzenesulfonates; humans; imidazoles; indazoles; indoles; morpholines; neoplasms; niacinamide; phenylurea compounds; phthalazines; piperidines; protein kinase inhibitors; protein-tyrosine kinases; purines; pyridines; pyrroles; quinazolines; receptor, epidermal growth factor; receptor, erbb-2; receptors, vascular endothelial growth factor
Settore MED/06 - Oncologia Medica
mar-2007
http://www.biological-markers.com/article/rationale-and-clinical-results-of-multi-target-treatments-in-oncology-art001215
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/423801
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