5.2 Cancer therapies: cytotoxics to targeted therapies Flashcards

1
Q

What are the phases of drug assessment?

A

In vitro: shows activity in cell lines
Preclinical: animal models
Phase I: clinical assessment - dose finding
Phase II: Safety and efficacy assessment in various tumours
Phase III: comparing against best available treatment
Phase IV: post marketing safety surveillance

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2
Q

How does chemotherapy work?

A

Effect cellular division which promotes apoptosis. There is no selection for tumour cells but normal cells are thought to be able to recover better.
Works best against dividing cells

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3
Q

Which cancer is chemo used as curative?

A

Paediatric tumours, germ cell malignancies, leukaemia, lymphomas

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4
Q

What are monoclonal antibodies?

A

Proteins synthesised to bind onto specific ligands, tumour cel proteins or receptors on the cell surface necessary for tumour growth and neutralize their action

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5
Q

What are small molecule inhibitors?

A

Block the activity of a signalling pathway inside the cells to prevent tumour growth

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6
Q

What is the target for rutiximab and what is it used for?

A

CD 20 in lymphoma

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7
Q

What is transtuzumab, what is its trade name and what is it used for?

A

Her2 receptor - Herceptin in breast cancer and gastric cancer

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8
Q

What is imatinib, what does it target and what is it used for?

A

Glivec, c-KIT and bcr-abl used in GIST and CML

small molecule transduction inhibitor

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9
Q

What is the role of Her2?

A

The Her2 receptors play a key role in cell growth and survival. Over expression or mutation leads to increased proliferation of the cancer cells.

Promotes invasion, survival and angiogenesis of cancer cells

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10
Q

How to you determine Her status?

A

Immunohistochemistry to look for the receptors

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11
Q

What are the strategies for inhibiting Her2?

A

Transtuzumab (Herceptin): monoclonal antibody to block ligand binding or receptor dimerization

Lapatinib (Tykerb): small molecule kinase inhibitor

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12
Q

What is the main toxicity of transtuzumab?

A

Reversible cardiotoxicity

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13
Q

What is transtuzumab emtansine and when is it used?

A

T-DM1
monoclonal antibody trastuzumab (Herceptin) linked to the cytotoxic agent DM1. This enters the cell and causes damage this way. Used in transtuzumab resistant Her2+ breast cancer

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14
Q

What is Lapatinib and when is it used?

A

Small molecule dual kinase inhibitor (EGFR or Her2) and is used in transtuzumab resistant advanced cancer in combination with Xeloda

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15
Q

What is the theory behind targeting VEGFR?

A

Causes regression of tumour microvasculature and normalisation of surviving mature vasculature to improve access of chemo drugs and inhibits new vessel growth

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16
Q

What is EGFR

A

EGFR is a regulator of cell cycle progression, repair and survival and is involved in tumour metastases

17
Q

What is Bevacizumab and what is it used for?

A

Monoclonal antibody to VEGF

Works in metastatic colorectal, NSCLC, Breat and renal cell cancer

18
Q

What is Cetuximab and what is it used for?

A

IgG monoclonal antibody against EGFR the blocks EGFR and inhibits proliferation, angiogenesis and metastases and stimulates apoptosis

Used for EGFR positive colorectal and head and neck

19
Q

What is the marker in colorectal patients to indicate cetuximab (anti EGFR) usage?

A

K-RAS and NRAS wild type will respond to anti EGFR therapy

20
Q

What is the main side effect of cetuximab?

A

Acneiform rash - severity of which indicate positive response

21
Q

What are the tyrosine kinase inhibitors drugs of EGFR and what are the side effects?

A

Gefitinib
Erlotinib
Afatinib

Side effects: rash and diarrhoea

22
Q

What is Ipilimumab and what is it used for?

A

Anti CTLA-4 monoclonal antibody which blocks T cell activation - used for melanoma

23
Q

What is Dabrafenib and what is it used for?

A

Inhibitor of BRAF which blocks the MAPK pathway used for melanoma