Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Princess Margaret Hospital, Co-Chair Gynecology, NCIC CTG

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Princess Margaret Hospital, Co-Chair Gynecology, NCIC CTG"— Presentation transcript:

1 Princess Margaret Hospital, Co-Chair Gynecology, NCIC CTG
NEW AGENTS ON THE HORIZON: IMPLICATIONS FOR PHASE I, II & III TRIALS DNA Repair and PARP inhibitors Carol Aghajanian, Nicoletta Colombo & Amit Oza Acknowledgements: Stan Kaye and AZ for slides Amit M. Oza Professor of Medicine, Princess Margaret Hospital, University of Toronto Co-Chair Gynecology, NCIC CTG

2 Types of DNA damage and repair
Type of damage: Single- strand breaks (SSBs) Double- strand breaks (DSBs) Bulky adducts O6- alkylguanine Insertions & deletions Mismatch repair Base excision repair Recombinational repair Repair pathway: Nucleotide- excision repair Direct reversal DNA damage can occur in several different forms, including SSBs or double-strand breaks (DSBs).1 In higher eukaryotes, genomic stability is essential for healthy functioning and survival. DNA damage may induce mutations and can lead to cell death via apoptosis.2 Therefore, several repair mechanisms have evolved to maintain the integrity of the genome.1 Base excision repair (BER) is a key pathway in the repair of SSBs and is reliant on the enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP).1 For DSB repair, there are two predominant pathways: Homologous recombination (HR) that involves a protein kinase, ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) Non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) that requires DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK).2 HR is the most accurate mechanism for repairing DSBs, whereas NHEJ is rarely error-free.2 Abbreviations on slide: AGT, O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase; ATM, ataxia telangiectasia mutated; MLH1, MutL homolog; MSH2, MutS homolog; XP, xeroderma pigmentosum References 1. Jackson SP, Bishop CL. Drug Discovery World 2003; Fall: 2. Jackson SP. Biochem Soc Trans 2001; 29: HR NHEJ Poly ADP Ribose Polymerase Repair enzymes: ATM DNA-PK XP, poly- merases MSH2, MLH1 AGT BRCA

3 PARP-1 is a key enzyme involved in the repair of single-strand DNA breaks
DNA damage PARP PAR chains are degraded via PARG Binds directly to SSBs Repaired DNA PARP-1 is found in the cell’s nucleus and is a key component of BER, the DNA SSB repair process.1 PARP-1 activation is an immediate cellular response to metabolic, chemical, or radiation-induced DNA SSB damage.2 PARP-1 mediates the repair of SSBs via the activation and recruitment of repair enzymes. Firstly, PARP-1 detects and signals the presence of an SSB by binding to the DNA adjacent to the damage. Once bound, PARP-1 catalyzes the cleavage of the coenzyme nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) into nicotinamide and ADP-ribose to produce highly charged branched chains of poly(ADP-ribose) (PAR). These activities of PARP-1 serve to recruit other repair enzymes, such as DNA ligase III (LigIII) and DNA polymerase beta (polβ), and scaffolding proteins such as x-ray repair complementing gene 1 (XRCC1), to the site of damage, where together the enzymes repair the damaged DNA.2 DNA polymerase uses the complementary strand of DNA as a template to fix the SSB, and DNA ligase creates the final phosphodiester bond to fully repair the DNA. After repair, the PAR chains are degraded via PAR glycohydrolase (PARG). References 1. Hoeijmakers JH. Nature 2001; 411: 2. D’Amours D et al. J Biochem 1999; 342: NAD+ Nicotinamide +pADPr Repair enzymes PAR Once bound to damaged DNA, PARP modifies itself producing large branched chains of PAR

4 Inhibiting PARP-1 increases double-strand DNA damage
DNA SSB XRCC1 LigIII PNK 1 pol β PARP Inhibition of PARP-1 prevents recruitment of repair factors to repair SSB Inhibition of PARP-1 activity prevents the recruitment of DNA repair enzymes and leads to failure of SSB repair and accumulation of SSBs. During the S-phase of the cell cycle, the replication fork is arrested at the site of an SSB, which then degenerates into a DSB. In normal cells, this triggers activation of the HR pathway to repair the DSB.1 Abbreviation on slide: PNK 1, polynucleotide kinase 1 Reference 1. Helleday T et al. Cell Cycle 2005; 4: Replication (S-phase) DNA DSB

5 Selective effect of PARP-1 inhibition on cancer cells with BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation
DSB in DNA Normal cell BRCA-deficient cancer cell DSB repaired effectively via HR pathway Deficient HR pathway – DSB not repaired When PARP-1 is inhibited, SSBs collapse replication forks leading to an increase in DSBs.1,2 In normal replicating cells, DSBs are repaired by the HR pathway. BRCA1 or BRCA2 are a vital part of the HR mechanism as without these proteins, the replication fork cannot be restarted.3 In cells that are deficient in HR repair (eg breast or ovarian cancer cells with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 deficiency), the inhibition of PARP activity leads to an increase in DSBs that cannot be repaired by this mechanism. DSBs can induce genomic instability and cell-death mechanisms such as apoptosis.2 In addition, many of these DSBs would be repaired by other, error-prone mechanisms, leading to large numbers of aberrations and this in turn would also ultimately lead to cell death. The effect of PARP inhibition would be highly specific to tumor cells that have a HR deficiency (eg BRCA1 or BRCA2 deficiency). This results in selective cell killing and an increased therapeutic ratio; normal cells have a working HR repair pathway and so would not be affected in this way. References 1. Bryant HE et al. Nature 2005; 434: 2. Helleday T et al. Cell Cycle 2005; 4: 3. Lomonosov M et al. Genes Dev 2003; 17: Cell survival Cancer cell death

6 x x Tumour Selective Synthetic Lethality Lethality Normal or
heterozygote for HR defect HR deficient e.g. BRCA1/2-/- DNA DAMAGE DNA DAMAGE x HR NHEJ SSA BER NER etc HR NHEJ SSA BER NER etc x PARPi PARPi Error prone repair Genomic instability Cell death Lethality

7 RESPONSE TO AZD 2281, Parp inhibitor - OLAPARIB BY PLATINUM-FREE INTERVAL
Total Platinum sensitive Platinum resistant Platinum refractory No. of evaluable patients 46 10 25 11 Responders by RECIST 13 (28%) 5 (50%) 8 (32%) 0 (0%) Responders by GCIG CA125 18 (39%) 8 (80%) 2 (18%) Responders by either RECIST or GCIG criteria 21 (46%) 11 (44%) SD (> 4 cycles) 9 (15%) 1 (10%) 4 (16%) 1 (9%) Median duration of response in weeks (range) 31 (10-96) 31 (16-96) 29 (10-84) 39 (27-51)

8 23 mm Strong family history Ovarian BRCA1-/-

9 Breast BRCA? Ovarian BRCA1-/-
12 mm 6.8 mm Breast BRCA? Ovarian BRCA1-/- 6.5 mm 3 mm

10 CORRELATION OF PLATINUM SENSITIVITY WITH RESPONSE TO OLAPARIB
Sensitive Resistant Refractory Platinum-free interval (months) CR/PR SD >4 months PD

11 SINGLE AGENT TREATMENT WITH OLAPARIB
Well tolerated oral therapy not associated with the typical toxicities of chemotherapy Clear evidence of beneficial tumour response in BRCA mutated ovarian cancer patients 46% (21/46 pts) response rate (RECIST or GCIG CA125) 15% meaningful disease stabilisation Total clinical benefit rate of 61% Median response duration: 8 m Randomized trials now underway

12 POTENTIAL OF PARP INHIBITOR (SINGLE AGENT) IN SPORADIC OVARIAN CANCER
Question: What proportion of ovarian cancer patients will have BRCA1/2 dysfunction, either due to mutation of either gene or for other reasons, e.g. methylation of this or related genes? Answer: • approx 15% of sporadic ovarian cancers have mutation of either gene; in serous histological subtypes, proportion is 18% • approx 15-20% more cases have BRCA dysfunction, through methylation, etc. • approx 10% have FANCF methylation Therefore: potentially half the cases of serous ovarian ca could benefit from targeted single agent treatment - how can these be identified?

13 Randomized Phase II/III
Phase I-II studies Phase I: Combination with - platinum, topotecan Phase II: Single agent BRCA +/- Randomized Phase II/III Post chemo consolidation/maintenance Combination/maintenance Carbo/taxol +/- Parp inhibitor

14 Parp Inhibition Compelling efficacy data in hereditary ovarian cancer patients Studies in hereditary ovarian cancer. High grade serous histology – “BRCAness” Without BRCA mutations Combination studies Chemotherapy Targeted agents

15 PARP Inhibitors in Clinical Trials
Agent Company Strategy Administration AG014699 Pfizer Combination* IV KU59436 AstraZeneca-Kudos Single Oral ABT-888 Abbott BSI-201 BiPar Combinations INO-1001 Inotek-Genentech MK Merck Single agent and combination GPI 21016 MGI Pharma Adapted Ratnam K, Low JA Clin Cancer Res 2007;13:

16 FURTHER DEVELOPMENT OF OLAPARIB - 1
S E olaparib 400 mg bd cont Patients with advanced ovarian cancer with BRCA-1 or 2 mutations, relapsed within 12 months of platinum-based chemotherapy olaparib 200 mg bd cont caelyx/doxil 50 mg/m2 q4 weekly n = 90, recruitment complete primary end point = PFS statistical analysis: combined olaparib arms vs caelyx/doxil, aimed at detecting incr. in PFS from 4 m to 7.3 m (HR 0.55, 80% power)

17 FURTHER DEVELOPMENT OF OLAPARIB - 2
S E Patients with serous ovarian cancer, responding to 2nd or 3rd line platinum-based chemo, with CR/PR (penultimate treatment-free interval >6 m) olaparib 400 mg bd until PD placebo until PD n = 250 - BRCA mutation not necessary Primary end point: progression-free survival Recruitment now underway

18 PATIENT SELECTION FOR SINGLE AGENT
Predictive biomarker: immunohistochemistry, with BRCA 1/2 antibodies functional (ex vivo) test for loss of HR (RAD 51 foci-formation) molecular signature (gene array) and/or: background of • repeated response to platinum-based chemo • prolonged survival (>5 yrs) • serous histology

19 OLAPARIB AND ITS ROLE IN SPORADIC CANCER – AN ANECDOTE
57-yr-old pt with metastatic endometrial cancer, first diagnosed in 1999, no family history had multiple lines of prior chemotherapy, including platinum-based treatment on 7 occasions (responding each time with progressively shorter duration) BRCA testing: negative for mutations began olaparib 400 mg b.d. (in bioavailability study) with progressive disease (liver, spleen, pleura) 6 weeks after last platinum-based treatment 2 days later: developed symptoms of brain mets continued olaparib and no other treatment

20 After 6 weeks treatment, complete resolution of symptoms, radiological response in brain, pleural met 2/12/08 21/1/09 2/12/08 17/3/09

21 KEY ISSUES FOR FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS OF PARP INHIBITORS IN OVARIAN CANCER
• What determines resistance to (single agent) PARP inhibitor treatment? • recent data indicate return of BRCA function through intragenic deletion of mutation (in BRCA2) (Edwards et al, Nature 2008) • clinical data now beginning to emerge; suggest that platinum sensitivity is retained; for example (our longest responder) ….

22 BRCA1-/- OVARIAN CANCER PATIENT
Carboplatin + Caelyx Olaparib 98% CA125 decline 86% CA125 decline initial prolonged response to olaparib, then radiological and CA125 progression subsequent response to carboplatin/caelyx


Download ppt "Princess Margaret Hospital, Co-Chair Gynecology, NCIC CTG"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google