Open Research Newcastle
Browse

Small molecules and targeted therapies in distant metastatic disease

Download (80.01 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-09, 22:43 authored by P. Hersey, L. Bastholt, D. Schadendorf, V. Chiarion-Sileni, G. Cinat, R. Dummer, A. M. M. Eggermont, E. Espinosa, A. Hauschild, I. Quirt, C. Robert
Chemotherapy, biological agents or combinations of both have had little impact on survival of patients with metastatic melanoma. Advances in understanding the genetic changes associated with the development of melanoma resulted in availability of promising new agents that inhibit specific proteins up-regulated in signal cell pathways or inhibit anti-apoptotic proteins. Sorafenib, a multikinase inhibitor of the RAF/RAS/MEK pathway, elesclomol (STA-4783) and oblimersen (G3139), an antisense oligonucleotide targeting anti-apoptotic BCl-2, are in phase III clinical studies in combination with chemotherapy. Agents targeting mutant B-Raf (RAF265 and PLX4032), MEK (PD0325901, AZD6244), heat-shock protein 90 (tanespimycin), mTOR (everolimus, deforolimus, temsirolimus) and VEGFR (axitinib) showed some promise in earlier stages of clinical development. Receptor tyrosine-kinase inhibitors (imatinib, dasatinib, sunitinib) may have a role in treatment of patients with melanoma harbouring c-Kit mutations. Although often studied as single agents with disappointing results, new targeted drugs should be more thoroughly evaluated in combination therapies. The future of rational use of new targeted agents also depends on successful application of analytical techniques enabling molecular profiling of patients and leading to selection of likely therapy responders.

History

Journal title

Annals of Oncology

Volume

20

Issue

. Supplement 6

Pagination

vi35-vi40

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Health

School

School of Medicine and Public Health

Usage metrics

    Publications

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC