Research News: Potential Cancer Treatments Through Inhibiting HER Kinase

in #steemstem6 years ago

Today I am going to embark on a new series of posts where I create for you brief, journalistic style breakdowns of high impact scientific publications. I am calling this series "Research News" (if anyone would like to create me a unique thumbnail for this series, please reach out to me on the steemSTEM Discord, and I can describe to you what I envision)

A consortium of researchers from prestigious institutions such as Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (in New York City), and the Dana-Farmer Cancer Institute (in Boston MA) have just published a work in Nature. Where they discuss the use of a SUMMET (a clinical trial composed of patients with a wide variety of histories and mutations) on some commonly identified mutations in two kinases (HER2 and HER3) which are found in a variety of cancer types.

Kinases are enzymes which have a specialized function in our cells. They attach phosphate molecules to various amino acids on other proteins. This is done for a variety of reasons including: activating (speeding up), deactivating (slowing down), and complex assembly (allowing several proteins to come together and make a larger protein machine). Thus the function of kinases are essential to the fine tuned, and interwoven web of enzyme activities that keep our cells running smoothly. If kinases go haywire, so do our cells, resulting in one of the many ways that we can develop cancer.

To date, little is known what the consequences of many of these identified mutations in the HER kinases are (and as a result, little is known about how to effectively treat them), some are thought to activate these enzymes (speeding them up) however most have not been characterized. What is known however, is that the mutations promote the development of cancer.

Neratinib

To tackle the generation of a broad swath of information regarding the viability of targeting the various mutant forms of the HER kinases, researchers embarked on a clinical trial where a large group of patients were treated with a drug that stops the functioning of these enzymes, called neratinib. It was noted which tumors responded positively or negatively to the treatment, and samples from those patients tumors were collected allowing for sequencing of each of the genomes. The information gained will allow for better understanding of the precise role that the mutated forms of these kinases play in the development of the patients cancers.

It also furthers our ability to perform modern 'Precision Medicine' where knowing the effect of a treatment down to the genetic level can enable doctors to pick and choose which drug should be used to combat which cancer causing mutation a future patient has. What this means is that the information contained in this study can be used to enable personalized therapies for each cancer sufferer possessing a HER mutation. It also illustrates the growing importance of geno-typing each patients cancer, and the power of modern DNA sequencing technologies.

The authors were able to extract information on 31 unique HER2 mutations and 11 unique HER3 mutations. These enzyme alterations were found in 21 different varieties of cancer including breast, lung and colon. Through their studies their observation of activity of the HER inhibitor (neratinib) down to the genomic level in a variety of the cancer types which was promising, though the authors reported that the response rates were still lower then currently approved therapies.

Still, the information presented in this study is of high impact as it suggests that targeting these mutations specifically could be effective especially in combination with other chemotherapy techniques. It also opens the door to the study of combination therapies where neratinib is used at the same time as another HER kinase inhibiting compound to determine whether more potent anti-cancer effects are observed on the various mutations identified as positive hits here.

Furthermore, the authors identified functional information on a variety of mutations to the HER kinases which were previously not understood. They found that many mutations which responded well to the treatment (they were using an inhibitor here, so mutants that were responders were those where the enzyme was sped up). This is important information as knowing what changes to enzyme activity result from which mutations will ALSO lead to much more effective treatments in the future as well.

The biology of cancer is exceedingly complex, information like that contained in this study is extremely important to help in the process of assembling a clearer picture of how our cells go awry. There is no easy answer for how best to treat cancer, however through intensive study and genotyping we are beginning to see the puzzle pieces slowly come together.

Sources

Text Sources

https://www.nature.com/articles/nature25475

Image Sources

Thumbnail Image, The Extracellular Domain of HER2

neratinib structure

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Thanks for sharing this interesting research news..just read the full paper. I found that the efficacy of neratinib is not that great in comparison to other approved therapies (targeting oncogenic alterations in EGFR, ALK, ROS1 and BRAF ) and may not work as a good monotherapy to treat wide variety of HER2- and HER3-mutant cancers. The well-know problem with neratinib is it induces serious diarrhea in patients. Thats why they are required to give mandatory anti-diarrhoeal prophylaxis with neratinib. But hey every drugs have their good and bad sides in terms of side effects and efficacy.

Neratinib was recently approved by FDA to prevent recurrence of early-stage HER2-positive breast cancer. Neratinib HER Mutation Basket Study (SUMMIT) looks like a very promising phase II clinical trial to watch closely for and its future strategy to go into Phase III trial. There is certainly a promise for this work to move forward if novel combination of neratinib with other less toxic anti-cancer drug is used. Using neratinib as a monotherapy would be a hard sell. Just my opinion after looking at the data and following the discussion of authors. Cheers to science!

I found that the efficacy of neratinib is not that great in comparison to other approved therapies (targeting oncogenic alterations in EGFR, ALK, ROS1 and BRAF ) and may not work as a good monotherapy to treat wide variety of HER2- and HER3-mutant cancers.

Yep, I made a point to mention that they stated this, but they also mentioned its potential in use in combination therapy with other HER inhibitors. So it could still find a way to prove more useful then traditional therapies yet, onward for more research.

For clarity I mentioned this in the following paragraph:

Still, the information presented in this study is of high impact as it suggests that targeting these mutations specifically could be effective especially in combination with other chemotherapy techniques. It also opens the door to the study of combination therapies where neratinib is used at the same time as another HER kinase inhibiting compound to determine whether more potent anti-cancer effects are observed on the various mutations identified as positive hits here.

Using neratinib as a monotherapy would be a hard sell

Indeed, its just not efficacious enough. However, I think the more important information here came from the identification of a whole host of new information on which HER mutations are gain of function. This will allow for a better, more targeted application of inhibitors to those people with cancers having these gain of function mutations.

Thanks for clarifying. I was skimming through. I forwarded this nature paper to my PhD friend who works on protein engineering to enhance the efficacy of HER-targeted therapeutics. I will point this post to him. Looking forward for your research news series.

Thanks, I was trying to write this for a slightly more general audience. Your friend would likely get much more out of the original research article then my small discussion about it :)

Great post. Perhaps derivatives of neratinib will end up being effective treatments for this specific type of cancer.

They weren't screening specific types of cancers. HER mutations (there are a variety of different ones) are found in a wide swath of different cancers (breast, lung, colon were explicitly found and mentioned in this article, but there are also others). Alterations in phosphorylation pathways are one of the major drivers in development of cancer.

Every so often someone knowledgeable comes along and says that a cancer cure is on the horizon, like within 10 years or whatever. And their reasonings seem plausible. Do you have any estimate/opinion for when we'll finally beat this thing, as opposed to treatment that doesn't always work?

Never

one of my friend is suffering from cancer first stage , she is really worried

Sorry to hear, hopefully she responds well to treatment/surgery and makes a full recovery.

she is taking heavy doses, she was very afraid , we all colleague comfort her

Sometimes people get desperate and try supplements they heard about or read about on the internet. Don't believe everything you read on the internet and don't disbelieve everything. If something seems to be worth a try, be sure to check with your doctor.

Doctors typical response is "You don't need that."
Your question should be, "Doctor, is there anything harmful in this supplement?"

You don't want to do damage to your body, especially when your body is fighting an ailment.

I read in the past that for cancer it's good to keep your vitamin D3 levels up to a high normal level. There is an informative website vitamindcouncil.org

There are many foods and herbs that appear to be helpful. Do a web search on the common weed found growing everywhere, dandelion. Always clear everything with your doctor. Doctors have knowledge and experience that a web search cannot compare to. Work with your doctor and don't hide things from your doctor that you want to try. Some alternative treatments can be harmful.

Best wishes for your friend.

Science has proven that there is so much more to our universe than our limited 5 senses can comprehend. Be sure to pray for your friend.

thank you dear fro best wishes, she is too young and having small 2 kids that's why she is taking much tension of her disease ,

great info u have here, you've heard about this news, it's probably the biggest breakthrough in cancer treatment
http://med.stanford.edu/news/all-news/2018/01/cancer-vaccine-eliminates-tumors-in-mice.html

such a great work thats how we should do, im glad for you having thoese upvotes , my best one 0.4 maybe lol the begainnig on steemit is a bit hard , we need some encouragement from you mates I belive in relation with this beautiful commuity, waiting to see your next professional work

Very kind of you to say :)

The beginning is indeed hard!

one of best feelings when u get the gift for ur hard work

If only the cure could be found I'd still have my awesome uncle who didn't survive chronic myeloid leukemia. Always happy to hear a breakthrough in this fight against cancer as I'm sure many have been victims.

There are many cures for Cancer but the cures are being SUPPRESSED!
I recommend that you do a research on "The Truth About Cancer" by Ty Bollinger

I hope and pray that we will one day defeat this disease, as it has claimed the lives of people from all over the world

Excellent information, As a doctor The biology of cancer as you mentioned is a subject that is always in constant improvement, I had the joy of reading and about this progress. And I thank you as a reader for the way you write the topic and explain it. It is not easy to make this type of post and I think it is a good idea to do this series. You have my support

I previously worked with erlotinib, a chemotherapeutic EGFR (HER1) inhibitor. Of course genetic variance in tumors is very important for the response to a drug - that's why this work is exceptional.

But from what I understood, a main problem of RTK inhibitors is the quite fast development of tumor resistance.

Too-lazy-to-use-pubmed-question: Do you have any idea if the aquiration of resistance was yet connected to certain genes or mutations?

The development of resistances is definitely due to mutations ( that's how the process works, as I'm sure you are aware). Unfortunately I am not knowledgeable on the specifics of mutational prevalence of the resistant variants.

I think DNA methylation (or loss of methylation), especially in promoter regions of ABC transporters, also plays a role.
However, it would be nice to find genetic prevalence not only for response, but also for resistance! Ty for your answer.

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