Abstract
Although epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitors have been used to treat non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) for decades with great success in patients with EGFR mutations, acquired resistance inevitably occurs after long-term exposure. More recently, combination therapy has emerged as a promising strategy to overcome this issue. Several experiments have been carried out to evaluate the synergism of combination therapy both in vitro and in vivo. Additionally, many clinical studies have been carried out to investigate the feasibility of treatment with EGFR-tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKi) combined with other NSCLC treatments, including radiotherapy, cytotoxic chemotherapies, targeted therapies, and emerging immunotherapies. However, a significant gap still exists when applying pre-clinical results to clinical scenarios, which hinders the development and use of these strategies. This article is a literature review analysing the rationalities and controversies in the transition from pre-clinical investigation to clinical practice associated with various combination strategies. It also highlights clues and challenges regarding future combination therapeutic options in NSCLC treatment.
Keywords: Combination, EGFR-TKi, NSCLC, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, immunotherapy
Introduction
Cancer is still one of the leading causes of death from illness, both in developed and developing countries 1. Approximately 14.1 million newly diagnosed cases and 8.2 million deaths have been reported throughout the world according to the data set GLOBOCAN, which includes data on the annual increase in social medical burden 2. Among all cancer types, lung cancer causes the highest number of cancer-related deaths in males, and is among the top five causes of cancer-related deaths in females 3. In total, 1.8 million new cases of lung cancer were diagnosed in 2015, with a half of them living in underdeveloped areas 4. Of note, in contrast to the decreasing incidence in Western countries, lung cancer diagnoses and death in China are still rising 5, pointing to a tough and long road ahead to control the morbidity and mortality associated with lung cancer.
It has been reported that NSCLC contributes to over 80% of all lung cancer cases 6. Platinum cytotoxic chemotherapy as well as radiotherapy emerged approximately half a century ago as therapeutic strategies for patients with NSCLC 7. Although the application of those treatments with surgical operation was beneficial for some patients, by relieving pain, prolonging lifespan, and improving the quality of life 8, the occurrence of adverse effects that not only killed cancer cells but also damaged the normal tissues and organs hampered the extensive application of those strategies 9. With the development of individualised treatment, it has become well appreciated that lung cancer patients with certain genetic backgrounds would benefit from targeted therapy 10. EGFR is one of the members of the erbB family, a series of transmembrane growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase proteins, including erbB1 (EGFR), erbB2 (HER2), erbB3 (HER3), and erbB4 (HER4) 11. Approximately 30% to 40% of NSCLC patients harbour an EGFR mutation 6, which promotes the constant phosphorylation of EGF receptors, activates downstream signalling pathways such as RAS-RAF-MEK-ERK, PI3K-AKT-mTOR, and JAK-STAT, and in turn confers cancer cell proliferation and survival 12. Therefore, targeting EGFR is a promising therapeutic strategy for NSCLC patients with an EGFR mutation, which have been highly successful in recent decades 13.
Unfortunately, acquired resistance to EGFR-TKi treatment, where lung cancer cells become insensitive to those inhibitors after a long period of treatment, almost inevitably occurs 14. Possible mechanisms for the acquired resistance have been extensively discussed. Appearance of second-site hot spot mutations that partially contributed to the acquired resistance, such as T790M 15, D761Y 16, and T854A 17, with T790M being the most common alteration, led to the discovery of the third-generation EGFR-TKis, such as AZD9291 18 and CO-1686 19. Other mechanisms leading to resistance not involving EGFR mutations included the bypass signalling activation such as the amplification of mesenchymal-epithelial transition (MET) 20, a type of human hepatocyte growth factor receptor that is essential for embryonic development, organogenesis, and wound healing, or a mutation in the PI3K pathway 21 found in some NSCLC patients who did or did not undergo EGFR inhibitor treatment. Occurrence of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) was reported to confer acquired resistance to EGFR targeted therapy 22. Combination strategy has been suggested as a promising method not only to overcome resistance but also to reduce the dosages of both agents to minimise adverse effects and enhance the anti-cancer effect of individual strategies 23. The current review summarises EGFR-TKi combinations for treating NSCLC, including radiotherapy, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, and emerging immunotherapy. The focus is on both clinical outcomes and pre-clinical evaluations, to analyse the pros and cons of various combination strategies and to elucidate clues for future therapeutic options in clinical practice.
EGFR-TKi combined with radiotherapy
Radiotherapy is widely used in the treatment of NSCLC 24. It is usually used as an adjuvant treatment postoperatively. However, for patients with locally advanced NSCLC who cannot undergo surgery, radiotherapy combined with chemotherapy is helpful 24. The rationale of administering EGFR-TKi with radiotherapy is based on the involvement of EGFR overexpression or mutation in radio-resistant cases of NSCLC. Chinnaiyan et al. 25 reported the synergistic anti-cancer effect of erlotinib combined with radiotherapy in UM-SCC6 and H226 human NSCLC cell lines via attenuating cell clonogenic survival and in vivo tumour growth. These effects appeared to be attributed to the addition of erlotinib to radiation therapy, which induced cell apoptosis, inhibited EGFR activation, overexpressed Rad51, and enhanced other signalling mediators, such as Egr-1, IL-1β, and CXCL1 25. Kim et al. 26 found EGFR expression in three different NSCLC cell lines to be positively correlated with sensitivity to EGFR-TKi treatment, but to be negatively correlated to radio-sensitivity. They found that the involvement of erlotinib could not only increase G1 cell cycle arrest in those cell lines, but also promote cell apoptosis in A431 26. Michael et al. 27 summarised several pre-clinical studies and addressed various combination mechanisms apart from above-mentioned ones, including inactivating cancer stem cells directly to improve local tumour control, modulating several signalling pathways, suppressing DNA repair, decreasing cell repopulation, and improving re-oxygenation, all of which provided valid evidences for clinical practice. Several trials have tested the combination of EGFR-TKi and radiotherapy, and some have reported that the combination would be feasible, tolerated, and effective in certain populations of patients 28, indicating that the use of the combination should be determined individually for specific cases based on the patient's genetic background.
Besides chest irradiation, local radiotherapy limited to the brain region is a treatment option for NSCLC patients with brain metastasis, which includes 20% to 40% of all NSCLC cases 29. These patients account for a large proportion of NSCLC-associated deaths. The brain-blood barrier (BBB), which restricts the ability of systematic chemotherapeutic agents and EGFR-TKi to reach the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) 30, can be damaged when brain metastasis occurs. The resultant leakage of the BBB in turn improves the penetration ability of these agents or inhibitors, which could be applied together with whole-brain radiotherapy (WBRT) 31. Many clinical trials have reported the availability of WBRT combined with EGFR-TKi for patients with brain metastasis. Cai et al. 32 found that, compared with radiotherapy alone, the addition of EGFR-TKi significantly increased patients' progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). Fan et al. 33 showed a significant difference in median survival time (MST) between cases with an EGFR mutation and those with wild-type EGFR (22.0 vs 7.5 months, p=0.0001). Lu et al. 34 reported the significant improvement in OS as the combination controlled metastatic intracranial lesions. However, controversy remains over whether the combination can bring about realistic benefits to patients, including limited improvement in OS compared with WBRT alone 35, 36, or severe toxicity up to over grade 3 37. These results suggested that the application of these combination should be carefully weighed for NSCLC patients with brain metastasis, until significant improvement of OS outweighs the potential adverse effects, or until those adverse effects become manageable. It is worth mentioning that, in recent years, osimertinib, the next-generation EGFR-TKi, was proved to have better penetration through BBB than gefitinib, which led to the enhanced activity in leptomeningeal disease therapy 38. In comparison with platinum-pemetrexed chemotherapy, administration of osimertinib showed significantly higher ORR and longer PFS in advanced NSCLC patients with CNS metastasis 39. These results indicated that osimertinib could be one of the promising strategies for NSCLC patients with brain metastasis that may outperform radiation and combination therapy.
EGFR-TKi in combination with chemotherapy
In the past, patients who suffered from various types of cancer significantly benefited from classical cytotoxic drug chemotherapy, administered either simultaneously with surgery to increase the success of the operation or continuously in unresectable cases to control the progression of diseases and improve the patient's quality of life 8. Chemotherapy is still recommended as the first-line therapy in NSCLC patients without defined therapeutic targets 40, although several treatments combining chemotherapy and EGFR-TKi are under development.
Platinum-based chemotherapy (cisplatin or carboplatin) is often used to treat NSCLC 7, whereas its combination with EGFR-TKi showed mixed results in both pre-clinical studies and in clinical trials. Lee et al. 41 indicated that a combination of low-dose erlotinib and cisplatin may exert a synergistic effect in NSCLC cell lines that contain an EGFR exon 19 deletion, which is probably due to an anti-angiogenesis effect via targeting c-myc/HIF-1α/VEGF signalling. However, a meta-analysis that included 191 randomised phase II trials concluded that the combination of erlotinib plus carboplatin and paclitaxel did not have a significant beneficial effect on PFS and OS but rather showed more severe adverse effects compared to erlotinib alone, regardless of the EGFR status 42. Furthermore, Tsai et al. 43 reported that the failure of the TKi-platinum combination was probably due to the antagonistic effect of the two compounds, as EGFR-TKi can interfere with the absorption of cisplatin. Liu et al. 44 demonstrated that the inhibition of autophagy could improve the synergism of the gefitinib-cisplatin combination. Future studies will probably reveal the reason for the failure to translate these “promising” pre-clinical results into clinical effects, and provide possible solutions that will allow these combination therapies to be used in clinical practice (Figure. 1).
Gemcitabine is another cytotoxic agent used in NSCLC therapy. It has been reported that the combination of gemcitabine and AG1478, an EGFR-TKi, produces a synergistic anti-cancer effect depending on the level of ERK activation as well as KRAS status 45. Nonetheless, a multicentre, randomised, open-label phase trial showed that sequentially delivered erlotinib and gemcitabine did not provide beneficial effects to patients over gemcitabine alone 46. A recent systematic analysis summarised a number of clinical trials of combination therapy using EGFR-TKi together with various cytotoxic chemotherapeutic agents and concluded that the combination is not superior to either agent alone for the first-line treatment of NSCLC 47. Thus, further studies are required to determine the possible effectiveness and mechanisms of combination therapy.
Pemetrexed has recently been developed to suppress the metabolism of intracellular folic acid, and thus prevent cell division 48. It has significant activity and favourable tolerance as well as low toxicity when compared to other cytotoxic agents, and has been well studied for administration either alone or in combination 48. A combination of pemetrexed and EGFR-TKi has been highly touted to overcome EGFR-TKi-acquired resistance. In their study, Wu et al. 49 illustrated that the synergistic anti-cancer effect of the combination can only be found in the EGFR-TKi resistant PC9/GR cell line and not in the EGFR-TKi sensitive PC9 cell line, with a possible mechanism of inducing cell apoptosis and suppressing AKT as well as ERK phosphorylation in synergy. La Monica et al. 50 demonstrated that the sequence of EGFR-TKi and pemetrexed administration is crucial for EGFR-TKi-resistant cell lines to respond well to the treatment. Clinical trials have confirmed the synergism of the combination, and that the synergism is dependent on EGFR genetic status instead of the presence of resistance. In NSCLC patients with an EGFR-sensitive mutation, the combination produced better PFS or objective response rate (ORR) with acceptable toxicity compared to those produced by either EGFR-TKi or pemetrexed alone 51-53. However, in patients with wild-type EGFR, studies on the combination were reported to be either invalid 54 or terminated without published results 55. Further clinical studies are required to determine of the most suitable cases for pemetrexed-EGFR-TKi combination treatment (Figure. 1).
EGFR-TKi combined with targeted therapy
Although classical cytotoxic chemotherapy has been widely used for decades, the relief of cancer burden is usually accompanied with significant adverse effects, such as myelosuppression, in most cases 56. Therefore, targeted therapy was developed to treat the disease with fewer side effects. This approach has achieved tremendous success in the last two decades in specific groups of patients, holding the promise of emerging personalised medicine 57. A large number of inhibitors have been discovered for targeting specific signaling pathways, including VEGFR/angiogenesis 56, EGFR/RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK 57, PI3K/AKT/mTOR 58, and JAK/STAT 59. Studies of these targeted therapies as part of combination treatment are still underway in both pre-clinical and clinical studies.
Anti-VEGFR2 agents
Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (VEGFR2), one of the subunits of the VEGFR family, is strongly associated with angiogenesis which plays a key role in tumour progression and metastasis 60. As micro-vessel count was reported to be an independent prognostic predictor of NSCLC 61, targeting VEGFR2 should be a promising strategy for NSCLC treatment. Bevacizumab is a promising antibody for blocking VEGFR2, and is used in combination with EGFR-TKi as the first-line treatment for NSCLC 62. Li et al. 63 found that the addition of bevacizumab to EGFR-TKi in NSCLC xenografts enhanced the TKi concentration in tumour samples with high levels of VEGF protein, the direct ligand of VEGFR2, suggesting that the combination of targeting EGFR and VEGFR2 may produce a synergistic anti-cancer effect. Clinical data have shown that the combination may be significantly beneficial for patients with specific genetic backgrounds. An open-label, randomised, multicentre, phase II study showed a significant extension of PFS in patients with EGFR-mutation positive when treated with erlotinib plus bevacizumab compared with erlotinib alone 64. Although the results of another phase II trial failed to meet its primary goal, it showed that the combination of gefitinib and bevacizumab resulted in longer PFS in the sub-group of patients with an EGFR-sensitive mutation of exon 19 deletion 65. A recent meta-analysis showed that patients with T790M-positive tumours may have a significant improvement in PFS compared to that of patients with T790M-negative tumours 66. Several clinical trials are in progress, either in the first-line 67 or the second-line therapy 68, to evaluate the feasibility of an EGFR-TKi and bevacizumab combination as well as to determine eligible patients for this therapy.
Small molecules that target VEGFR2 have also been discovered. However, none of them are VEGFR2-specific inhibitors. Vandetanib, developed by AstraZeneca as a VEGFR and EGFR dual inhibitor, has been included in several clinical trials from phase I to phase III. It has shown a favourable effect and acceptable toxicity 69. BMS-690514, also a dual inhibitor that targets both VEGFR and EGFR that showed a significant anti-tumour effect in NSCLC xenografts 70, was evaluated in a phase I/IIa clinical trial. It was found to have anti-tumour activity and manageable toxicity in patients with NSCLC regardless of EGFR status 71. Cabozantinib, an oral small-molecule inhibitor of VEGFR2 and MET, showed a significant increase in PFS and OS compared to erlotinib, but showed no further improvement when erlotinib was added as a combination 72. As most of these trials are based on the second-line or the third-line NSCLC therapy 69, 72, these novel VEGFR small molecules can be developed as an option for patients who have failed to respond to previous chemotherapies or targeted therapies.
Anti-erbB family agents
EGFR, one of the sub-receptors in the erbB family (erbB1), is composed of an extracellular domain, a transmembrane domain, and an intracellular kinase domain 73. EGFR-TKis bind the intracellular domain of EGFR to suppress erbB dimerisation, which in turn blocks downstream signal transduction 74. Numerous anti-EGFR monoclonal antibodies have been developed to target the extracellular domain of EGFR to prevent its ligand from activating the receptor 75. Cavazzoni et al. 76 studied the combination of cetuximab, the first developed anti-EGFR monoclonal antibody, and erlotinib, and found that the application of erlotinib could induce the accumulation of EGFR protein via protein stabilisation and could increase the binding sites of NSCLC tumour cells to cetuximab, which potentiated the cetuximab-dependent cell cytotoxicity and enabled a synergistic anti-cancer effect in vitro and in vivo. Wang et al. 77 reported that in NSCLC cells harbouring an EGFR-T790M-resistant mutation, combined erlotinib and cetuximab led to significant cell growth inhibition, induction of apoptosis, and EGFR signal suppression. These results indicate a probable synergism between these two anti-EGFR compounds. Although several phase I clinical trials 78, 79 have shown good tolerance to the combination of EGFR-TKi and anti-EGFR antibodies and have suggested the need for further studies on the efficacy of the combination, phase II/III studies with published results are rare except for several case reports on the feasibility of the afatinib and cetuximab combination 80, 81. Moreover, administration of cetuximab after treatment with a TKi showed no significant clinical response 82.
Overexpression of HER2, another member of the erbB family, is also found in various types of cancer including NSCLC, and is associated with a poor clinical outcome 83. Pre-clinical studies have found that the amplification of HER2 in NSCLC enhanced sensitivity to treatment with gefitinib via the inhibition of HER2/HER3 heterodimer formation 84, implying the possibility of combination therapy with the addition of an anti-HER2 antibody to EGFR-TKi treatment. Nakamura et al. 85 found that the combination of gefitinib and trastuzumab, the well-known anti-HER2 antibody, exerted a synergistic effect on cell proliferation attenuation through co-suppression of EGFR downstream signalling in the NSCLC cell line A549, which is driven by EGFR/HER2 heterodimers, but not in NCI-H23, which is controlled by other factors or receptors. Friess et al. 86 demonstrated the synergistic anti-tumour effects of a combination of erlotinib and pertuzumab, another marketed anti-HER2 antibody, in three NSCLC xenograft models regardless of HER2 expression levels. However, positive outcomes after treatment with these combinations have been sparsely reported in clinical practice. Unfortunately, it has been reported that the combination of pertuzumab and erlotinib is poorly tolerated in patients with relapsed NSCLC 87. The results of these summarised clinical trials with the application of anti-HER2 therapy in NSCLC cases, either as monotherapy or in combination, are controversial 88, indicating that more studies are required to determine the exact role of anti-HER2 treatment in NSCLC before further clinical application.
Anti-EGFR downstream agents
The disruption in EGFR downstream signalling has also been shown to contribute to the acquired resistance of NSCLC to EGFR-TKi therapy 89, 90. One such signalling pathway is RAS-RAF-MEK-MAPK, the inhibition of which would be a promising strategy to tackle acquired resistance in NSCLC patients who have previously undergone EGFR-TKi treatment. Sorafenib, a multi-target anti-cancer drug used to treat liver cancer, can suppress the activation of MEK as well as its downstream target, MAPK, which can in turn inhibit cell and tumour growth in various EGFR-TKi-resistant lung cancer cell lines and in vivo 91. Balko et al.92 found that inhibition ERK activity, which is essential for NSCLC cell proliferation, by applying its up-stream MEK1/2 inhibitor U0126, can reduce NSCLC cell survival, induce cell apoptosis and sensitise those cell lines to the treatment with EGFR inhibitors. Song et al. 93 reported that the application of either CZ0775 or AZD6244, two MEK1/2 dual inhibitors, along with the EGFR inhibitor lapatinib showed a synergistic anti-cancer effect in both EGFR-sensitive and EGFR-resistant NSCLC cell lines via the promotion of caspase-3 dependent cell apoptosis. Li et al. 94 also confirmed the synergism of AZD6244 with gefitinib in promoting cell death in EGFR-TKi resistant NSCLC cell lines. Since two MEK inhibitors, cobimetinib and selumetinib, were approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of melanoma 95, 96, several clinical trials have included those MEK inhibitors in combination with EGFR-TKis to investigate their combined effect in treating NSCLC 97, 98. However, recently published data indicated that the combination of AZD6244 with erlotinib failed to show improvement in ORR or PFS in comparison with monotherapy in both KRAS mutant and wild-type advanced NSCLC cases 99. Moreover, the clinical outcomes in a phase III trial with the addition of AZD6244 to chemotherapy were not superior to those of chemotherapy alone 100. These results suggest that the clinical application of MEK inhibitors for NSCLC therapy, either as monotherapy or in combination, should be further investigated.
PI3K-AKT-mTOR is another EGFR-controlled signalling pathway, in which the mutation or overexpression of a PI3K family protein continuously activates its downstream target 101. It accounts for not only the formation and progression of many tumours but also the resistance to targeted inhibitors such as EGFR-TKi 102. PTEN, a known tumour suppressor gene, that negatively regulates activation of AKT driven by PI3K 102, was found to be associated with elevated AKT phosphorylation in patients resistant to gefitinib treatment 103. In contrast, the significantly higher expression of BIM and mTOR, two downstream factors in the PI3K pathway, was shown to be correlated with poor clinical outcomes in both OS and PFS in patients treated with erlotinib 104. This result indicated that the abnormality in PI3K signalling contributes, at least in some NSCLC cases, to EGFR-TKi resistance. Therefore, several pre-clinical combination studies were carried out, which have shown promising results. For example, in one study, OSU-03012, which targets both ER stress and AKT, helped in overcoming the resistance of NSCLC cell lines to either erlotinib or gefitinib treatment 105. The combination of everolimus, an mTOR inhibitor, and gefitinib showed synergism in both primary and resistance-acquired NSCLC cell lines in a dose-dependent manner 106. However, it is uncommon to find these combinations in clinical trials 107-109. In fact, marketed PI3K/AKT/mTOR inhibitors are rare, with just a few that are aimed at specific (advanced/refractory) cancer types 110-112. Moreover, the potential adverse effects, including the suppression of myelocytes and immunocytes, toxicity to the liver and kidneys, and haematotoxicity 113, restrict the late-stage application of inhibitors as well as their potential combination with other TKis.
MET inhibitors
MET receptors, which transduce several downstream signalling targets that mediates the process of cell survival and proliferation, including MAPK, PI3K, STAT, and NF-kB, have been widely discussed as potential targets in cancer therapy 114. Puri et al. 115 found that stimulation of EGF and HGF simultaneously in NSCLC cell lines promoted tumour cell growth and downstream signalling activation. Zhang et al. 116 reported that the overexpression of MET led to increased EGFR phosphorylation via EGFR heterodimerisation, whereas suppression of both MET and EGFR produced synergistic anti-cancer effects both in vitro and in vivo by inhibiting downstream signalling. These results point to a promising approach for treating NSCLC via targeting both MET and EGFR. Several pre-clinical studies have reported the feasibility of the combination in treating NSCLC. For example, the combination of gefitinib with either a HGF neutralising antibody or a MET inhibitor showed additive anti-cancer effects in transgenic mice with lung tumourigenesis 117. Additionally, the application of the MET inhibitor INC-280 restored the sensitivity of NSCLC cell lines to erlotinib in the presence of HGF stimulation via increased cell apoptosis 118, and the addition of MET inhibitor tepotinib reversed resistance to EGFR inhibitors in NSCLC models mediated by MET activation 119. However, results of clinical trials have been diversing, with several studies reaching their end points 120-122, whereas others have failed to fulfill the expected outcomes 123, 124. Besides, amplified toxicity, witnessed as decreased maximum tolerated dose of the combination (crizotinib plus erlotinib) in comparison with either agents in monotherapy on the approved dose 125, or increased incidence of interstitial lung disease when additional tivantinib involved in erlotinib treated advanced NSCLC cases 126, resulted in termination of such clinical trials as well. In summary, KRAS mutations 123, strong MET amplification 121, 127, or a high level of extracellular HGF 128 could be useful biomarkers in NSCLC patients, indicative of a good response to this combination, although further investigation in clinical trials is required. What is noteworthy is that the amplification of MET has been reported as an important mechanism in NSCLC patients resistant to treatment with osimertinib 129, a novel third-generation EGFR inhibitor 18, suggesting a potential application of combination therapy with compounds that lead to MET inhibition.
The effectiveness of targeted therapy involving EGFR-TKi combinations in pre-clinical studies is based on specific genetic alterations or on bypassing signal activation 130. Nevertheless, the reasons for the failure of translating those strategies into clinical practice include, but are not limited to the following: the differences in the tumour microenvironment between humans and animals, or between in vivo and in vitro conditions 131, and the integrity of the tumour's internal environment, from which the tumour cannot be completely overcome via suppression of one or two individual genes or pathways 132. The more we know about these differences, the more we will be able to make the right decisions and promote successful therapeutic effects for specific patients (Figure 1).
EGFR-TKi combined with immunotherapy
Recently, immunotherapy has become the most popular option for cancer treatment 133. Unlike targeted therapy, which produces direct anti-tumour effects by blocking specific signalling pathways that are over-activated in cancer, the goal of immunotherapy is to stimulate in vivo immune cells to kill tumour cells that have escaped from previous immunological surveillance 134. The antibodies used in immunotherapy are larger, which are highly specific and selectively bind their target receptors than those used in targeted therapy 135. Therefore, they have potent anti-cancer effects. Application of large molecules for immunotherapy will become widely available, as many antibodies have been approved for NSCLC treatment 136, 137; meanwhile, the combination of immunotherapy with targeted therapy is also under evaluation 138.
The programmed death 1 (PD-1) pathway and its key ligand, the programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) have emerged in recent years as key targets for NSCLC therapy. Several antibodies that target either PD-1 or PD-L1 have been developed and show encouraging clinical outcomes in patients with NSCLC 139. Pre-clinical results have shown that EGF-stimulated EGFR activation upregulated PD-L1 expression, which induced T-cell apoptosis and contributed to the immune escape of both EGFR-sensitive and EGFR-resistant NSCLC cell lines 140. D'Incecco et al. 141 reported that elevated PD-L1 levels are associated with the presence of EGFR mutations and, with EGFR-TKi treatment, higher ORR, time to progression (TTP), and OS. This suggests that the combination of anti-PD-1/PD-L1 and EGFR-TKi might have synergistic effects in NSCLC therapy. Although many clinical trials have attempted to study this combination in pre-treated NSCLC cases and have shown promising clinical activity, the much higher incidence of adverse effects, with most of them being grade 3/4, impeded the progress of the clinical studies, and even led to termination 142. Moreover, two key phase II/III clinical trials, namely Keynote-010 143 and CheckMate-057 144, respectively, have revealed that patients with EGFR-mutated NSCLC would have poorer survival outcomes by applying anti-PD-1 antibodies compared with those harboring EGFR-wild type. Considering the effectiveness of EGFR-TKi on EGFR-mutation positive, rather than negative cases, how to fully utilise the functional role of anti-PD-1/PD-L1 antibody for NSCLC therapy, especially for those cases with EGFR mutation, should be further evaluated.
Cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen-4 (CTLA-4), another immune checkpoint receptor, has also been developed as a potential target for NSCLC therapy 145. However, administration of anti-CTLA-4, a large molecule, even as monotherapy, frequently led to toxicity 146, 147. The safety issues encountered by multiple pipelines indicated that we lack sufficient knowledge about antibody-based immunotherapy, which should be overcome before the clinical application of immunotherapeutic drugs.
Conclusions and Perspectives
For patients with NSCLC who harbour EGFR mutations, marketed EGFR-TKis (Table 1) are the first-line strategy recommended in the NCCN guidelines 40. It will remain the preferred option for a long period until a better choice emerges. Therefore, acquired resistance will be one of the most challenging issues to overcome. Even for the new-generation EGFR-TKis, they are not insusceptible to acquired resistance 149. Mechanism of drug actions for various kinds of combination strategies have been reported in pre-clinical studies. As shown in Figure 2, these can be broadly summarised as: 1). Promoting cell apoptosis synergistically 25, 49, 77, 92, 117; 2). Co-suppression in EGFR and its downstream signalling activation 25, 49, 77, 85, 92, 105, 140; 3). One drug facilitating the other to enhance drug sensitivity 63, 76. However, it is rare that these pre-clinical reported “promising” combination strategies can be translated into clinical practice successfully, suggesting the mechanisms of drug actions discovered in pre-clinical studies are unlikely to pertain to the clinical situations. Clearly, biomedical scientists and physicians should work closely to rationalise the gaps between pre-clinical results and clinical outcomes. In the foreseeable future, radiotherapy and chemotherapy will still be used as adjuvant or neoadjuvant therapy to combine with EGFR-TKi in cases of advanced, refractory, or metastatic NSCLC as long as the effectiveness can be validated in clinical trials. The use of combined targeted therapy with EGFR-TKi should be case dependent, as diverse signalling activation will be developed differently in different patients. A comprehensive application of chip-based diagnose techniques, next-generation sequencing, and immunohistochemistry to monitor potential biomarkers in circulation or in tumour samples will be helpful to determine and provide appropriate treatment options for specific cases. For combination therapy involving immunotherapy, it is crucial to avoid the increased adverse effects caused by the administration of antibodies, which is a problem awaiting detailed mechanistic elucidation. Therefore, it is important to find out the sub-population with the best response to the combination therapy.
Table 1.
EGFR-TKi | Structure | Target(s) | Developed by | Approved by |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gefitinib 85 |
EGFR | AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals | FDA, EMA, CFDA | |
Erlotinib 25 |
EGFR/JAK2 | Genentech, Inc. | FDA, EMA | |
Icotinib 33 |
EGFR | Beta Pharma, Inc. | CFDA | |
Afatinib 80 |
EGFR/HER2 | Boehringer Ingelheim | FDA, EMA | |
Osimertinib 18 |
EGFR-T790M | AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals | FDA, EMA, CFDA | |
Olmutinib 146 |
EGFR-T790M | Boehringer Ingelheim & Hanmi Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd | South Korea |
Moreover, development of alternative strategies should be encouraged, in addition to the previous options, to cure individual NSCLC cases. Targeting tumour metabolism is one of the emerging and promising strategies for cancer treatment recently, which refers to the therapeutic modulations of the specific process of energy metabolism that cancer cells adopted, namely metabolising glucose through the anaerobic glycolysis rather than the normal mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) even in normoxia conditions 150. Traditional chemotherapies and targeted therapies produce direct insult to cancer cells, such as cisplatin/carboplatin which destroy the function of DNA and produce cell cycle arrest 151, or target inhibitors that block specific signaling pathways leading to cancer cell death 13, 62, 114. However, it is the dysfunction of cancer cell metabolism that conferred the Warburg Effect 152, while targeting this phenotype could be a strategy to expose tumour in an unfavourable micro-environment. This hypothesis has inspired many scientists to focus on several enzymes that would be crucial in the process of cell metabolism, such as glucose transporters (GLUTs) 153, hexokinase2 (HK2) 154, pyruvate kinase M2 (PKM2) 155, pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (PDK) 156, and lactate dehydrogenase-A (LDHA) 157. A number of inhibitors that target those specific enzymes have been developed as potential anti-cancer agents 158. However, researches that directly engaged in those cell metabolic inhibitor in combination with EGFR-TKi are rare, only with two papers recently reported the anti-cancer synergy in NSCLC cell lines or cancer xenograft model via EGFR-TKis combined with dichloroacetate 159 or 2,2-dichloroacetophenone 160, both of which are PDK inhibitors. Further investigations will be required to understand the mechanism of drug actions, which could facilitate the development of this combination strategy to overcome the resistance to EGFR-TKi treatment.
Last but not the least, retrospective studies should be performed to analyse not only the activity or toxicity of the combination but also the categorisation of patient subgroups with the aim to select patients that are likely to be benefited from combination therapy in terms of cost-effectiveness, extended lifespan, and improved quality of life.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank Editage (online.editage.com) for English language editing. Thanks are due to Dr. Xiaohui Hu and Dr. Shaolin Zhang for helpful discussion. This work was supported by the Science and Technology Development Fund, Macao S.A.R (FDCT) (Project reference no. 086/2014/A2) and the University of Macau multiyear research grant (MYRG2016-00102-FHS).
Abbreviations
- EGFR
epidermal growth factor receptor
- NSCLC
non-small cell lung cancer
- TKi
tyrosine kinase inhibitors
- MET
mesenchymal-epithelial transition
- EMT
epithelial-mesenchymal transition
- BBB
brain-blood barrier
- CSF
cerebrospinal fluid
- WBRT
whole-brain radiotherapy
- PFS
progression-free survival
- OS
overall survival
- MST
median survival time
- VEGFR2
vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2, OXPHOS, oxidative phosphorylation
- GLUTs
glucose transporters
- HK2
hexokinase2
- PKM2
pyruvate kinase M2
- PDK
pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase
- LDHA
lactate dehydrogenase-A.
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