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NOVEL
TARGETED AGENTS FOR THE TREATMENT OF BLADDER CANCER: TRANSLATING LABORATORY
ADVANCES INTO CLINICAL APPLICATION
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doi: 10.1590/S1677-55382010000300003
XIAOPING YANG,
THOMAS W. FLAIG
Department
of Medicine, Division of Medical Oncology, University of Colorado Denver
School of Medicine
ABSTRACT
Bladder
cancer is a common and frequently lethal cancer. Natural history studies
indicate two distinct clinical and molecular entities corresponding to
invasive and non-muscle invasive disease. The high frequency of recurrence
of noninvasive bladder cancer and poor survival rate of invasive bladder
cancer emphasizes the need for novel therapeutic approaches. These mechanisms
of tumor development and promotion in bladder cancer are strongly associated
with several growth factor pathways including the fibroblast, epidermal,
and the vascular endothelial growth factor pathways. In this review, efforts
to translate the growing body of basic science research of novel treatments
into clinical applications will be explored.
Key
words: bladder neoplasms; drug therapy; vascular endothelial
growth factors; epidermal growth factors; fibroblast growth factors
Int Braz J Urol. 2010; 36: 273-82
INTRODUCTION
Bladder
cancer is common with 68,810 new cases and 14,100 deaths estimated in
the United States in 2008. It is the fourth most common cancer in men
and the ninth most common cancer in women (1). For patients with metastatic
disease, the systemic chemotherapy regimen of methotrexate, vinblastine,
doxorubicin, and cisplatin (MVAC) has been the foundation of systemic
therapy for many years. More recently, the chemotherapy combination of
gemcitabine and cisplatin (GC) has gained greater acceptance and largely
replaced MVAC for the treatment of advanced bladder cancer, based on a
phase III study comparing the two regimens in patients with locally advanced
or metastatic bladder cancer (2). While not clearly powered as a non-inferiority
trial, the 5 year overall survival was 13.0% versus 15.3% for GC and MVAC,
respectively. With similar efficacy and significantly reduced toxicity,
GC has been adopted as a standard, first-line regimen for advanced bladder
cancer.
In the second or third-line setting, several traditional chemotherapy
agents offer modest activity. Prior to the widespread use of GC, weekly
gemcitabine was examined in patients with bladder cancer who had previously
been treated with a platinum-based regimen with an overall response rate
of 22.5% (3). These promising results lead to the development of the GC
combination in the first line setting (4). Pemetrexed, a multi-targeted
anti-folate agent, was more recently tested in previously treated patients
with advanced bladder cancer. The objective response rate was 28% with
a small number of patients experiencing a complete response; however,
the median time to progression was short (less than 3 months) (5). Anti-microtubule
agents are also active in bladder cancer and have been evaluated in the
first and second-line setting. Paclitaxel demonstrated clear activity
in a small study of bladder cancer patients who had failed or were unfit
for standard first-line therapy (6). A current first-line regimen used
in patients unable to receive cisplatin-based chemotherapy combines paclitaxel,
carboplatin and gemcitabine. This triple-drug combination revealed an
objective response rate of 68%, with approximately half of these as complete
responses (7). Additionally, a phase II trial evaluated a different taxane,
docetaxel, in patients who had progressed despite cisplatin-based chemotherapy
with an objective response rate of 13%, but a short duration of response,
ranging from 3 to 8 months (8). The activity of docetaxel in bladder cancer
was also later tested in chemotherapy-naïve patients with a higher
response rate of 31% (9).
Over the last 10 years, significant advances have been made in the integration
of new biologically-targeted agents in the treatment of cancer. Approximately
20% of breast cancer patients have over-expression or amplification of
HER2/neu (EGFR2). Herceptin, a monoclonal antibody which targets HER2/neu,
is now commonly used in breast cancer patients with HER2/neu expression
yielding significant improvement in both the progression free (10) and
overall survival (11). The use of single agent cetuximab (Erbitux), a
monoclonal antibody against the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR),
demonstrates significant activity in patients with advanced colorectal
cancer (12). Subsequent analysis showed that patients with an activating
K-ras mutation, downstream of EGFR, receive no benefit from cetuximab.
This allows for the selection of an enriched K-ras wild-type treatment
population, excluding those with little chance of benefit (13). Bevacizumab
(Avastin) is a monoclonal antibody that binds to the vascular endothelial
growth factor (VEGF), which is over-expressed in many cancer types including
lung cancer. The addition of bevacizumab to standard chemotherapy significantly
improves the overall survival of patients with lung cancer, although the
rates of significant bleeding are increased (14). In renal cell carcinoma
(RCC) traditional cytotoxic chemotherapy has little objective activity.
A new class of agents, the small-molecule, multi-kinase inhibitors, have
recently been approved for the treatment of advanced RCC. Both sunitinib
and sorafenib target an array of pro-growth kinases including the vascular
endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR) kinases. As documented in phase
III randomized trials, sunitinib and sorafenib produce significant disease
stabilization and a small number of objective responses in patients with
RCC (15,16).
There are many examples of the successful use of targeted agents in modern
cancer therapeutics. Despite the prevalence of bladder cancer, the availability
of several potential targets in bladder cancer and the successful inhibition
of these targets in many other cancer types, no biologic agents are currently
in clinical use for the treatment of bladder cancer. We will review the
current state of pre-clinical evaluation of targeted agents for bladder
cancer and the potential impact of these agents in the clinical management
of bladder cancer.
MOLECULAR PATHWAYS IN
BLADDER CANCER
Two distinct
developmental pathways for bladder tumors have been characterized (17).
The first is that of a noninvasive papillary lesion without penetration
of the epithelial basement membrane (Ta tumor). Aberrant expression of
fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3), RAS and PIK3CA appear to
play a critical role in the development of low grade and generally non-invasive
bladder tumors (18). Approximately 20% of tumors are muscle invasive at
diagnosis and the prognosis in these cases is poor, with less than 50%
survival at 5 years (17). Tumors that penetrate the basement membrane
(T1) or invade the bladder muscle (T2) are therefore much more clinically
concerning and are associated with different biologic aberrancy, including
common p53 mutations. These distinct pathways of tumor development with
such different clinical outcomes imply that specific strategies for the
management of these tumors should be developed.
FIBROBLAST GROWTH FACTOR
RECEPTOR (FGFR)
Both basic
science and preclinical investigations indicate that FGFR mutation and
over-expression are seen commonly and occur early in the development of
non-invasive bladder cancer (19). Activating point mutations of the FGFR
have been identified in approximately 40% of bladder tumors. In the FGFR
family, FGFR3 is most prominent in normal urothelial cells, with only
low levels of FGFR 1, 2 and 4 observed by real-time reverse transcriptase
PCR (20). Further, mutations of FGFR3 are common in urothelial papillomas,
which are considered to be a precursor for papillary bladder cancer, suggesting
that FGFR3 mutation occurs early in the process of tumor development (21).
In addition to the mutational status of FGFR3, protein overexpression
of FGFR3 has been found commonly in bladder tumors, but not in normal
bladder tissue (22).
Although the clinical usefulness of FGFR inhibition is not yet known,
several pre-clinical evaluations have examined this approach in bladder
cancer. The stable expression of a small hairpin RNA (shRNA) against FGFR3
in bladder cancer cells demonstrates an inhibition of cancer cell growth,
supporting the central importance of this pathway in bladder cancer (23).
Additionally, human single chain Fv antibody fragments that recognize
the extracellular domain of FGFR3 have been isolated and characterized
(24). This antibody inhibits ligand-binding by the wild-type receptor
and has been shown to inhibit the growth of xenografts expressing FGFR3
in S249C bladder cancer cells (24). The high frequency of FGFR mutation
in superficial bladder tumors suggests the possibility of utilizing an
intravesical approach targeting FGFR in such patients. In vivo studies
demonstrate activity using a toxic fusion protein targeting FGFR3 in human
bladder cancer cells over-expressing this receptor (25).
EPIDERMAL GROWTH FACTOR RECEPTOR (EGFR)
Compared
to the FGFR pathway, targeting the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)
pathway is in a more mature phase, with the successful use of this approach
in the clinical setting of several other cancer types. In addition, significant
pre-clinical evaluation of this pathway has been undertaken. EGFR was
first characterized in invasive and superficial bladder cancer in 1989
(26). Abnormal expression of the urothelial EGFR and/or altered excretion
of EGF may well precede overt manifestations of transitional cell carcinoma
(TCC) and thus may serve as an early marker of the invasive phenotype;
the degree of EGFR overexpression in bladder tumors has been shown to
correlate with tumor stage and grade (27). Laboratory investigations have
shown that stimulation of the EFGR pathway both increases proliferation
and the migration of bladder cancer cells (28). Work to identify the predictive
markers for the response of bladder cancer cells to EGFR inhibition is
underway, using a broad spectrum of bladder cancer cell lines (29). Surprisingly,
there is no correlation between expression of EGF, the ligand of EGFR
and the activity of EGFR inhibitors in bladder cancer cells (29). Activating
mutations of EGFR, a key predictive marker for the activity of EGFR inhibitors
in non-small cell lung cancer (30), are uncommon in TCC of the bladder
(31).
Given the importance of EGFR in the biology of bladder cancer, a number
of therapeutic strategies against EGFR to treat bladder cancer are being
evaluated. Blockade of EGFR by monoclonal antibodies has been assessed
in several malignancies including bladder cancer. Among several anti-EGFR
monoclonal antibodies under clinical development, cetuximab (IMC-C225)
inhibits EGFR downstream signaling, cell cycle arrest, angiogenesis and
metastasis and is the most widely studied (32). The effect of this monoclonal
antibody on bladder cancer cells in an animal model has been reported
(29). Another anti-EGFR monoclonal antibody, panitumumab (ABX-EGF), has
been shown to have a potent effect on several tumors such as metastatic
colorectal carcinoma, although its application in bladder cancer is not
known (33).
EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors, such as gefitinib (ZD 1839) and erlotinib
(OSI-774), have been extensively studied in bladder cancer models. Preclinical
data demonstrate that gefitinib selectively inhibits proliferation and
angiogenesis in human bladder cancer cells (34). Erlotinib inhibits the
activation of epidermal growth factor receptor, mitogen activated protein
kinase, Akt and STAT3 (35,36).
HUMAN EPIDERMAL GROWTH
FACTOR RECEPTOR 2 (HER2/NEU)
HER2/neu
overexpression and to a lesser extent, amplification, are observed in
bladder cancer, suggesting the potential utility of HER2/neu-targeted
therapy in patients with advanced TCC (37). In a Japanese study of patients
with bladder tumors, immunohistochemical staining demonstrated HER2/neu
expression in 42.5% (38). More notably, according to the classification
of grade, 60% of pT4 patients were HER2/neu positive (38). Recently, a
multicenter phase II study has reported that 52.3% of metastatic urothelial
carcinomas are Her2/neu positive using the DAKO HercepTest Diagnostic
and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) (39), consistent with the
result of the Japanese group (38). The anti-tumor effect of TAK-165, a
new potent inhibitor of the HER2/neu tyrosine kinase, has been studied
in bladder cancer. Using a xenograft mouse model with the human bladder
cancer cell (UMUC3) TAK-165 treatment resulted in 22.9% growth inhibition
compared with the control group at 14 days (40).
It should be noted that the role of HER2/neu in the development of bladder
cancer has not been clearly defined. Although HER2/neu is up-regulated
in invasive bladder cancers, its overall expression in bladder cancer
cells is less than in breast cancer cells (40). Recently, a small study
reports that there is a poor association between HER2/neu protein overexpression
and gene amplification, in contrast to findings in breast cancer (41).
Additionally, Dinney et al. reported that the expression of HER4, but
not HER2/neu or HER3, correlates with stage, grade, and survival (42).
These reports raise the possibility that our understanding of the biology
of HER2/neu based on breast cancer evaluations may not be directly translated
into therapeutic strategies for bladder cancer.
VASCULAR ENDOTHELIAL
GROWTH FACTOR (VEGF)
VEGF and
its receptor are critically important in the process of angiogenesis and
therefore play a vital role in the tumor growth and metastasis. The VEGF
pathway was first characterized in bladder cancer in 1993 (43). While
VEGF expression is observed in many patients with low or intermediate
grade T1 bladder cancer, higher levels of VEGF RNA expression may be a
predictor of a more aggressive form of bladder cancer with earlier cancer
recurrence (44). Recent work has shown that the protein expression of
VEGF in bladder cancer tissue correlates with increased tumor stage (45)
and the serum levels of VEGF are directly associated with bladder cancer
stage (46). VEGF binds to several cognate tyrosine kinase receptors: VEGFR1,
VEGFR2 and VEGFR3. Of these, VEGFR2 appears to be the most attractive
target since its expression correlates with the pathologic stage in urothelial
carcinoma cell lines and bladder tumors (47).
Based on these preclinical observations, several animal studies and clinical
trials have been designed for this target. Neutralizing monoclonal antibody
targeted at murine VEGFR2 (DC101, ImClone Systems) has been combined with
paclitaxel, with its efficacy tested in an orthotopic bladder cancer xenograft
model (48). This combination demonstrated significant anti-neoplastic
activity. It is likely that the observed activity is via inhibition of
angiogenesis in addition to the induction of both tumor cell and endothelial
cell apoptosis. The anti-tumor activity of single-agent DC101 has been
examined in an orthotopic nude mouse tumor model with human 253J-BV bladder
tumors (49). DC101 therapy resulted in a decrease in VEGFR-2 phosphorylation
and an increase in endothelial cell and tumor cell apoptosis (49), but
did not completely inhibit tumor angiogenesis when used as a single-agent
(49). A VEGF-A splice variant protein conjugated with gelonin has also
been utilized to target the VEGF pathway (50). Gelonin is a plant toxin
with high cytotoxicity at very low doses (nM range). The VEGF-A splice
variant protein serves as a targeting component to specifically guide
and internalize the conjugate into the cancer cells with high VEGF expression.
This fusion protein suppresses tumor growth in an orthotopic bladder cancer
xenograft model (50), and has been validated in prostate and breast cancer
with the goal of preventing cancer metastasis (51,52).
ANGIOGENESIS AND ITS
INHIBITORS
Angiogenesis
is a rate-limiting step in tumor growth and the inhibition of new blood
vessel development may play a critical role in controlling tumor invasion
and metastasis. The management of bladder cancer with anti-angiogenesis
strategies is still in the early phase of implementation. In addition
to the VEGF pathway, other targets in the vascular compartment may be
considered including the endothelin (ET)-axis and the angiopoietin-Tie
pathway. The endothelin family (ET-1, ET-2, and ET-3) is a group of potent
vasoconstricting peptides (53). ET-1 has been studied most extensively
and has been shown to modulate endothelial cell proliferation, migration,
invasion, and microtubule formation. More interestingly, ET-1 increases
VEGF mRNA expression and VEGF protein levels, indicating probable cross-talk
between the endothelin-axis and VEGF signaling (54). Compared with normal
urothelium, increased expression of ET-1 and the associated endothelin-A-
and endothelin-B-receptors has been found in the vast majority of invasive
bladder cancer specimens (55). Overexpression of the endothelin-B-receptor
appears to be associated with a better clinical prognosis than with the
over-expression of the endothelin-A-receptor (56). Furthermore, overexpression
of ET-1 is associated with up-regulation of the micro-vessel density which
may impact the clinical aggressiveness of the tumor. These data suggest
that the ET -axis may represent a novel therapeutic target in bladder
cancer that is largely unexplored. Interestingly, the phase II clinical
testing of single-agent bosentan, a dual ET-receptor antagonist, to treat
stage IV melanoma patients has been reported, with stable disease noted
in some patients (57). The use of atrasentan, an inhibitor of the endothelin-A-receptor,
did not meet its primary endpoint of delayed time to progression in a
large phase III study, but did slow the rate of prostate specific antigen
rise in blood (58), additional phase III testing with atrasentan in prostate
cancer is underway.
Tie2, another angiogenic pathway, has received less attention since it
was only recently fully described and characterized. Tie2 is the tyrosine
kinase receptor of angiopoietin-1(Ang-1) and angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) (59,60).
This pathway has an active angiogenic phase in which blood vessel differentiation
by migration/sprouting is promoted; there is also a separate anti-apoptotic
effect that is seen with Tie2 signaling. Interestingly, although up-regulation
of Ang-1 and Ang-2 has consistently been demonstrated in many cancer types,
their direct role in tumor development is controversial (61). Recently,
serum levels of Ang-1, Ang-2 and Tie-2 have been examined in bladder cancer
(62). High serum levels of Tie2 are correlated with shorter metastasis-free
survival in both univariate and in multivariate analysis, suggesting that
Tie2 expression may be an independent risk factor for metastasis.
CLINICAL USE OF TARGETED
AGENTS IN UROTHELIAL CANCER
Accrual
to bladder cancer trials has been poor in recent years, especially in
the front-line setting (63). Accordingly, there have been a limited number
of clinical trials using biologic targeted receptor kinases in bladder
cancer, with many of these clinical studies only reported in abstract
form. The clinical pursuit of specific agents for use in bladder cancer
is based largely on the experience gained from their use for other tumor
types such as lung and breast cancer.
Trastuzumab is commonly used in the treatment of breast cancer and has
received significant attention as a therapeutic agent for bladder cancer
in light of the HER2/neu expression seen in malignant bladder tissue.
As a single agent, trastuzumab does not have clear activity against urothelial
cancer. In 7 patients with transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder
and HER2/neu protein over-expression, weekly trastuzumab did not yield
any objective responses, although 1 patient did achieve stable disease
(64). Another study examined trastuzumab in 6 patients with metastatic
transitional cell carcinoma and HER2/neu overexpression by immunohistochemistry
(IHC) (65). Trastuzumab was given with standard carboplatin and paclitaxel
chemotherapy in 4 of the patients, with paclitaxel in 1 patient and as
a single-agent in 1 patient; 2 of the participants were chemotherapy naïve.
Partial responses were seen in all 6 treated patients with initial tumor
regressions of 30-80%.
The largest published study to date on the use of trastuzumab in bladder
cancer was led by the Southwest Oncology Group (39). Of 109 screened advanced
urothelial cancer patients, 52% had HER2/neu overexpression by any method,
with the majority of these as protein over-expression (49% IHC, 14% FISH,
12% serum assessment). Forty-four of these chemotherapy-naïve patients
were treated with trastuzumab, carboplatin, paclitaxel and gemcitabine.
The primary endpoint of this study was the assessment of cardiac toxicity
from this regimen, which was seen in 23% (grade 1-3). Secondarily, the
objective response rate was 57% with five complete responses. The median
time to progression was 9.3 months and the median survival was 14.1 months.
While it is difficult to make firm conclusions from these non-randomized
and small studies, significant trastuzumab activity in bladder cancer
has not been demonstrated to date. As we discussed earlier, while HER2/neu
protein over-expression is commonly seen in bladder cancer, gene amplification
is much less common (39,66), although some investigators find a better
correlation with IHC status of HER2/neu and gene amplification (67). While
protein over-expression of HER2/neu is a predictive marker for trastuzumab
responses in breast cancer, this may not necessarily be true for bladder
cancer. As with many biologic agents, the identification of predictive
markers (e.g. K-ras status with cetuximab) (13) are critical to the successful
testing and use of targeted agents.
Lapatinib is an orally available inhibitor of EGFR and HER2/neu, and is
currently in clinical use for the treatment of breast cancer. Fifty-nine
patients with locally advanced or metastatic transitional cell carcinoma
with progression despite a platinum-containing front-line regimen were
treated with lapatinib (68). Independent radiological review revealed
1 partial response and 18 patients with stable disease. The median time
to progression was short (8.6 weeks). Additional biomarker predictors
of response are being investigated.
Inhibition of the VEGFR pathway has been preliminarily examined in bladder
cancer patients. A single-case report describes a man with metastatic
transitional cell carcinoma and squamous differentiation treated with
bevacizumab. At 24 months, the patient was reported to have minimal toxicity
and a sustained response, suggesting anecdotal activity (69). Sorafenib
is a multi-kinase inhibitor with prominent VEGFR inhibition. Treatment
with sorafenib has been evaluated in one study of 14 patients with untreated
advanced urothelial cancer (70). There were no objective responses, although
4 patients experienced stable disease; the median time to progression
was 1.8 months. A second larger study examined the use of sorafenib in
27 patients with urothelial cancer with progression after front-line therapy
(71). There were no objective responses noted with a median progression-free
survival of 2.2 months. A related small molecule inhibitor, sunitinib,
was examined as a first-line treatment in bladder cancer in those deemed
unable to receive standard cisplatin-based chemotherapy. Two of 16 treated
patients had a partial response and 8 participants had at least 6 months
of stable disease (72). A second study of sunitinib examined patients
with carcinoma of the urothelium who had progressed after 1-4 previous
chemotherapy (73). In this significantly pre-treated population, 3 of
45 patients had a partial response and 11 had stable disease. While preliminary,
these results suggest modest activity of sunitinib as a single-agent in
bladder cancer.
In other cancer types studied, targeted therapeutic agents are generally
most effective when combined with cytotoxic chemotherapy. While this is
a rationale approach to explore in bladder cancer, there are very limited
published data describing the combination treatments in this setting.
Gefitinib, an oral EGFR inhibitor, has been evaluated with cisplatin and
gemcitabine in 55 patients with advanced urothelial cancer (74). An objective
response was observed in 51% with a median overall survival of 14 months.
While these efficacy data are similar to standard gemcitabine and cisplatin,
it is not clear that gefitinib is the most suitable biologic agent to
integrate with cytotoxic chemotherapy, given the large negative studies
using this approach in lung cancer (75,76).
PERSPECTIVES
The current
treatment of advanced bladder cancer relies heavily on traditional cytotoxic
agents, despite the tumor expression of many targets of emerging biologic
agents currently available. Preclinical evaluation reveals several new
agents with encouraging in vivo data, targeting FGFR, the VEGF-pathway,
ET-axis, HER2/neu and EGFR. The translation of these laboratory findings
into the clinical treatment of patients with urothelial cancer has been
slow, with little published information currently available. It is important
to note that the accessibility of the bladder offers unique opportunities
to deliver novel therapies directly to the site of the tumor, but dramatically
improved accrual to bladder cancer trials will be needed to rapidly test
and select the next generation of treatment for those with bladder cancer.
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
None declared.
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________
Accepted:
November
15, 2009
_______________________
Correspondence
address:
Dr. Thomas
W. Flaig
Division of Medical Oncology
University of Colorado Denver School of Medicine
12801 E. 17th Avenue, Room L18-8117
Aurora, CO, 80045, USA
Fax: + 1 303 724-3889
E-mail: thomas.flaig@uchsc.edu
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