Neuroblastoma
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Transcript Neuroblastoma
Defining and Prioritising Novel Targets and Strategies
for Poor Prognosis - High Risk Paediatric Tumours
Neuroblastoma
Andrew DJ Pearson
SIOP 2012 - London: Paediatric Oncology Education Day
5th October 2012
Overview
Defining & Prioritising Novel Targets and Strategies for Poor Prognosis
High Risk Paediatric Tumours
• Neuroblastoma
• The way forward - Paradigm shift-biological, hypothesis driven clinical trials
Selection of agents
Pre-clinical evaluation
Incorporation of biomarkers and selection of patients
Paediatric Drug Development Networks
Interaction academia, pharma, regulators and parents
Novel trial design and integration Phase I – Frontline Future
Childhood Cancer
6
4
3
2
1
Year
Childhood Cancer Mortality
2005
2003
2001
1999
1997
1995
1993
1991
1989
1987
1985
1983
1981
1979
1977
0
1975
Mortality (per 100,000)
5
In the past, improvement in survival due
to international, multidisciplinary trials
Plateau in improvement in survival
High risk groups remain poor prognosis
with very toxic therapy
Rising cost of cure
Need for introduction of agents
targeting molecular drivers
Introduction of new drugs into the clinic
in the past has been slow, need to
accelerate drug development
Future
Faster and more efficient drug
development
Neuroblastoma
• Commonest solid tumour & variable
behaviour
• 50% present with high-risk disease (i.e.
the tumour has spread or there is genetic
evidence [MYCN amplification] that the
tumour will behave aggressively)
• Majority of patients with high-risk
neuroblastoma relapse following
treatment and die
• Neuroblastoma is a major cause of death
from cancer
100
Percentage surviving
Neuroblastoma
Neuroblastoma, age 1-14, stage 4, 1990-2005
Dec 2002 onwards
Apr 1999 - Nov 2002
Oct 1990 - Mar 1999
80
60
40
20
0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Years since diagnosis
Survival of children with Stage 4 neuroblastoma
Recent New Agents in Therapy
•
•
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•
Topotecan
Irinotecan
Temozolomide
Anti GD2+IL2+GMCSF
Molecularly Targeted Therapy has not been introduced into frontline care of children with neuroblastoma - Paradigm
Why is Paediatric Drug Development Slow?
• Limited availability of agents for paediatric investigation
• Rare conditions that require international clinical trials
• Early clinical trials have not tested robust biological hypotheses (lack of
incorporation of biomarkers)
• Insufficient pre-clinical testing and integration of cancer biology
Overview
Defining & Prioritising Novel Targets and Strategies for Poor Prognosis
- High Risk Paediatric Tumours
• Neuroblastoma
The way forward - Paradigm shift-biological, hypothesis driven clinical trials
Selection of agents
Pre-clinical evaluation
Incorporation of biomarkers and selection of patients
Paediatric Drug Development Networks
Interaction academia, pharma, regulators and parents
Novel trial design and integration Phase I – Frontline
• Future
Molecularly Targeted Therapeutics
Based on the understanding what drives the cancer cell
• Drugs that target the specific molecules that are
required for the growth of cancer tissue - not
present in normal tissue
• Ideally “reduced” toxicity
• Adult Targets
Glivec
– in chronic myeloid leukaemia –
2001
Lung Cancer – EGFR, EML4-ALK
GIST – c-KIT
Melanoma – BRAF V600E
Breast + Ovarian – BRACA1/2
Breast Cancer - HER2
• Used in conjunction with predictive biomarkers
- What is the best drug for an individual
patient?
The Changing Focus of Adult Anticancer Drug Development
Yap et al, Nature Reviews Cancer 2010
Phase I Development
Optimal Development of Molecularly Targeted Drugs
We want to follow the successes of adult drug development (Glivec)
• Selection based on: Biology and Molecular Pathology
Efficacy in pre-clinical models including genetically engineered murine models
(GEMM)
Compound availability, acknowledging high attrition rates
• Evaluation in hypothesis-driven early clinical trials employing predictive
and pharmacodynamic biomarkers
• Novel trial design and international networks
• Introduction into frontline trials through a personalised molecular
medicine approach
“From the bench to bedside and back again”
Neuroblastoma Targets
Focus on the identified molecular abnormalities that initiate and
maintain neuroblastoma
Themes
• MYCN - 20-25% amplification + 60%
protein expression
• Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) 10% mutations + 4% amplification
• p53 mutations - 2% + 15% at relapse
• MAPK/RAS/RAF pathway- 3%
• ATRX - 22%
Targeting MYCN
Direct
Oncoprotein stability
Through synthetic lethal interactions by
drugging genes that modulate critical
functions of MYCN – Chk1
Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)
• Angiogenesis
• MDM2-p53 antagonists
• MAPK - RAS - RAF Pathway
Neuroblastoma: Hypothesis - Therapies targeting MYCN protein stability will
display enhanced efficacy in patients with MYCN driven neuroblastoma tumours
IGF-1R
DALO
Functional Imaging
GDC0941
GSK-’436
Vemurafenib
PI3K
Ras/Raf
AKT
BEZ235
GDC0980
mTOR
RIDA
AZD8055
GSK-’212
MEK/ERK
AT9283
CCT137690
AurK
Chesler et al. Cancer Res 2006, ANR2010, AACR2010 AACR2011, Mol Cancer Ther 2011, ANR2012, CCR2012, Cancer Cell 2012
Neuroblastoma
Hypothesis - Therapies targeting ALK will display enhanced efficacy in
patients with ALK mutated or amplified neuroblastomas
Kaplan-Meier and long rank analysis of ALK-mutated and ALKamplified tumours – F1174 mutated versus wild-type cases
• Mutations of ALK gene in 10% of neuroblastomas - F1174 & R1275
• F1174 mutation - 58.8% have MYCN amplification
Strategies
1. Direct inhibitors – crizotinib
2. Combination approach
3. Novel compounds
Brouwer et al, Clin Cancer Res 2010;16:4353-4362
Targeting ALK – Combination Approach
Teeara Berry, Louis Chesler, Rani George, Cancer Cell 2012
Incorporation of Biomarkers
Predictive - What is the best drug
for an individual patient?
Vemurafenib
MK2206
Pharmacodynamic: is the drug
working in the way we expected?
MK2206
MK2206
Yap et al, Nature Rev Cancer 2010; Yap , JCO 2011; Garrido-Laguna Nat Rev Clin Onc 2011
Predictive Biomarkers - patient selection and
pharmacodynamic biomarkers
Repeat tumour biopsies in children are problematic
Source of Tumour Cells for
Biomarker Studies
• Bone marrow
• Circulating Tumour Cells
Functional Imaging: DCE MRI angiogenesis
AUC (left) and ADC (right) maps
Ganglioneuroblastoma (7 years old)
Implemented in the Beacon – Neuroblastoma
Trial
Glioblastoma (10 years old)
Miyazaki, et al. ISMRM 2011
Overview
Defining & Prioritising Novel Targets and Strategies for Poor Prognosis
- High Risk Paediatric Tumours
• Neuroblastoma
• The way forward - Paradigm shift-biological, hypothesis driven clinical trials
Selection of agents
Pre-clinical evaluation
Incorporation of biomarkers and selection of patients
Paediatric Drug Development Networks
Interaction academia, pharma, regulators and parents
Novel trial design and integration Phase I – Frontline
• Future
BEACON-Neuroblastoma
Phase II, two hypotheses, randomised, open label, 4-arm factorial trial to be run in
SIOPEN/ITCC centres
Biomarker rich - DCE MRI, Circulating TH, PHOX2B, DCX mRNA, angiogenesis related
biomarkers, tumour profiling, PK
Novel statistical design
BEVACIZUMAB
RANDOMISATION
Relapsed/
Refractory
Neuroblastoma
fulfils eligibility
criteria
BACKBONE
RANDOMISATION
Temozolomide
Temozolomide +
Bevacizumab
Temozolomide +
Irinotecan
Temozolomide +
Irinotecan +
Bevacizumab
International Phase II Strategy
“Drop the Loser” – Octopus
versus
versus
Backbone + PI3K
inhibitor
Backbone + IGF-1R
Backbone
(to be decided from
randomized Phase IIb)
versus
versus
Backbone + Aurora
inhibitor
Backbone +
MEK/ALK
Integration Phase I – Frontline
ITCC –SIOPEN New Drug Development Strategy
Personalised therapy with molecular targeted drugs and
immunotherapeutics
Phase I
Phase II
Novel agents progress
Relapse/Non-responder
Frontline studies
Patients selected for novel agents based on predictive biomarkers
Frontline studies stratified by molecular characteristics
Phase I Development
Optimal Development of Molecularly Targeted Drugs
• Selection based on: Biology and Molecular Pathology
Efficacy in pre-clinical models including genetically engineered murine models
(GEMM)
Compound availability, acknowledging high attrition rates
• Evaluation in hypothesis-driven early clinical trials employing predictive
and pharmacodynamic biomarkers
• Novel trial design and international networks
• Introduction into frontline trials through a personalised molecular
medicine approach
“From the bench to bedside and back again”
Accelerating Drug Development in Neuroblastoma
Future
•
•
•
•
Must utilise maximally knowledge of biology – challenges
Reduce attrition through pre-clinical models
Hypothesis driven, biomarker rich clinical trials
International Phase II with novel statistical design
Acknowledgements
• Peppy Brock – President
• Dominique Valteau-Couanet - INRC
• The Royal Marsden Hospital – Paediatric
Drug Development Team
Lynley Marshall, Lucas Moreno, Giuseppe Barone,
Susanne Gatz, Dominik Schrey, Andrea Boast, Gill
James, Tracey Crowe & Research Nurse Team
• The Institute of Cancer Research
• G Vassal - Chair
• B Geoerger - Clinical Trial Committee
• H Caron - Biology Committee
• R Riccardi - Training & Education Committee
• B Morland - Accreditation & Quality
Committee
Louis Chesler (Neuroblastoma Drug Development
Team)
Michelle Garrett (Clinical PD Biomarker Group)
Simon Robinson (Pre-clinical Imaging Team)
• University of Birmingham CRCTU
• Cancer Research UK Drug Development
Office