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Frontiers in Oncology logoLink to Frontiers in Oncology
. 2014 May 7;4:103. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00103

Novel Biologic Therapies for Thymic Epithelial Tumors

Yuanbin Chen 1, Helen Gharwan 1, Anish Thomas 1,*
PMCID: PMC4019864  PMID: 24847446

Thymic epithelial tumors (TETs) are comprised of a spectrum of histologically distinct tumors that also exhibit differences at the molecular level (1). Surgery is the mainstay of treatment but locally advanced and metastatic TETs can be inoperable and are associated with worse survival (2). Although multi-agent chemotherapy is associated with objective response rates (ORR) of 50–90% in the front-line setting [e.g., cisplatin, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide (CAP) (3), doxorubicin, cisplatin, vincristine, and cyclophosphamide (ADOC) (4)], no standard systemic treatments exist for relapsed or refractory TETs. Several biological agents have been evaluated in TETs in small phase II trials as illustrated in Table 1.

Table 1.

Published biological therapies in TETs.

Trial Agent Target N ORR (%) (CR + PR) TTP (months) PFS (months) Survival (months)
Palmieri et al. (5) Octreotide/lanreotide ± prednisone Somatostatin receptor 16 6 (37) 14 NR 15
Thymoma 10 4 (40) NR NR NR
Thymic carcinoma 3 1 (33) NR NR NR
Loehrer et al. (6) Octreotide ± prednisone Somatostatin receptor 38 12 (32) NR NR NR
Thymoma 32 12 (38) 8.8 NR Not reached
Thymic carcinoma 6 0 4.5 NR 23.4
Giaccone et al. (7) Belinostat HDAC 40 2 (5) NR NR NR
Thymoma 24 2 (8) 11.4 NR Not reached
Thymic carcinoma 16 0 2.7 NR 12.4
Thomas et al. (8) PAC–belinostat HDAC 13 7 (54) NR NR NR
Thymoma 7 5 (71) NR NR NR
Thymic carcinoma 6 2 (33) NR NR NR
Rajan et al. (9) Cixutumumab IGF-1R 49 5 (10) NR NR NR
Thymoma 37 5 (14) 9.9 NR 27.5
Thymic carcinoma 12 0 1.7 NR 8.4
Kurup et al. (10) Gefitinib EGFR 26 1 (4) 4 NR NR
Thymoma 19 NR NR NR NR
Thymic carcinoma 7 NR NR NR NR
Bedano et al. (11) Erlotinib + bevacizumab EGFR 18 0 NR NR NR
Thymoma VEGF 11 0 NR NR Not reached
Thymic carcinoma 7 0 NR NR Not reached
Thomas et al. (12) Sunitinib VEGFR 35 4 (11) NR NR NR
Thymoma PDGFR 16 1 (6) NR 5.5 NR
Thymic carcinoma 19 3 (16) NR 6.2 NR
Salter et al. (13) Imatinib KIT 11 0 NR NR NR
Thymoma PDGFR 0
Thymic carcinoma 11 0 NR NR NR
Giaccone et al. (14) Imatinib KIT 7 0 2 NR 4
Thymoma PDGFR 2 0 8.5 NR Not reached
Thymic carcinoma 5 0 1 NR 2
Palmieri et al. (15) Imatinib KIT 15 0 NR 3 Not reached
Thymoma PDGFR 12 0 NR NR NR
Thymic carcinoma 3 0 NR NR NR
Wakelee et al. (16) Saracatinib SRC 21 0 NR NR NR
Thymoma 14 NR NR 3.4 Not reached
Thymic carcinoma 7 NR NR 1.4 Not reached

NR, not reported.

Somatostatin Analogs

Somatostatin receptors are expressed in TETs and can be detected by octreotide scan (17). Palmieri et al. first showed efficacy of octreotide/lanreotide with or without prednisone in TETs (5). In another larger phase II trial, 38 patients with octreotide scan-positive TETs were treated with octreotide for 2 months. Responding patients continued to receive octreotide alone whereas patients with stable disease received additional prednisone for a maximum of 10 additional months. Two complete (5.3%) and 10 partial responses (25%) were observed in patients with thymoma, but no response was seen in thymic carcinoma (6).

Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors

Histone deacetylases (HDACs) regulate gene expression through chromosome remodeling. Belinostat is a HDAC inhibitor that has been evaluated in a phase II trial in patients with advanced TETs after failure of platinum-containing chemotherapy (7). Among 25 patients with thymoma, and 16 with thymic carcinoma, two patients with thymoma achieved partial responses. No responses were seen among patients with thymic carcinoma. Median time to progression in patients with thymoma and thymic carcinoma was 11.4 and 2.7 months, respectively. Median survival was not reached in patients with thymoma and it was 12.4 months in patients with thymic carcinoma. Belinostat has also been evaluated with CAP in the front-line setting in a phase I/II trial. The overall response rate was 71% in thymoma and 33% in thymic carcinoma (8).

Insulin-Like Growth Factor Receptor Inhibitors

Thymic epithelial tumors express insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor (IGF-1R), particularly recurrent or advanced tumors and those with aggressive histological subtypes (18). Cixutumumab, a fully human IgG1 monoclonal antibody that binds to IGF-1R with high affinity and induces internalization and degradation of the receptor, has been evaluated in a phase II trial of 37 patients with thymoma and 12 patients with thymic carcinoma, who had progressive disease after prior platinum-containing chemotherapy (9). Patients received cixutumumab at a dose of 20 mg/kg intravenously every 3 weeks until disease progression or development of intolerable toxicities. With a median follow up of 24 months, 5 of 37 thymoma patients achieved a partial response (ORR 14%). The median time to progression was 9.9 months and median survival was 27.5 months. In contrast, no responses were seen in patients with thymic carcinoma and the median time to progression and overall survival were 1.7 and 8.4 months, respectively. A significant increase in IFNγ-expressing CD4+ T cells and reduction in circulating endothelial progenitor cells (CEPs) were observed with treatment among responders. The potential predictive value of these biomarkers is under further investigation.

Multikinase Inhibitors

Multiple case reports have described responses to the multikinase inhibitors, sorafenib (19) and sunitinib (20) in patients with previously treated thymic carcinoma. To confirm the activity of sunitinib in previously treated TETs, 22 patients with thymoma and 16 with thymic carcinoma with progressive disease following at least one platinum-based chemotherapy regimen were enrolled in a phase II study. Sunitinib was administered orally at a dose of 50 mg once daily in 6-week cycles (4 weeks on 2 weeks off). In 19 evaluable patients with thymic carcinoma and 16 evaluable patients with thymoma, the ORR was 16 and 6%, respectively, and PFS was 6.2 and 5.5 months, respectively. Adverse events included cytopenia, fatigue, mucositis, hypertension, and reversible decline in left ventricular ejection. Additionally, 10 (53%) patients with thymic carcinoma had tumor shrinkage between 10 and 29% (12).

Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor, KIT and Src Inhibitors

Despites preclinical data demonstrating overexpression of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) (21) and KIT (22) and Src Kinase (23) in TETs, very low objective responses were observed in phase II studies evaluating these agents. A study using EGFR inhibitor, Gefitinib, yields only one response in 26 patients (10) while another study using Erlotinib plus Bevacizumab showed no response (11). Three trials evaluating KIT inhibitor Imatinib in TETs (1315) showed zero objective response. It is notable that although most tumors on these trials overexpressed KIT, no sensitizing mutation was found. Src inhibitor Saracatinib also failed to yield any objective response in a TET trial (16). For more details on these studies, see Table 1.

Ongoing Trials of Targeted Therapies in TETs

Milciclib, an inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinase 2/cyclin A complex and tropomyosin receptor kinase A (TrkA) is being evaluated in two phase II studies in patients with recurrent B3 thymoma and thymic carcinoma (NCT01011439 and NCT 01301391).

A phase II study is evaluating the role of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitor, everolimus in patients with TETs previously treated with chemotherapy. (NCT02049047).

Conclusion

In conclusion, although the presence of targetable mutations detected by current techniques of molecular profiling is low, whole genome and exome sequencing has the potential to uncover novel biological targets. Although many trials of targeted agents have yielded disappointing results, the unprecedented activity of sunitinib in thymic carcinoma and the disease stabilizing effect of cixutumumab in thymoma provides an impetus to continue to explore the role of novel biological agents in TETs.

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

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