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Triple negative breast cancers can adopt reversible state that is resistant to chemotherapy

18 Apr 2019
Triple negative breast cancers can adopt reversible state that is resistant to chemotherapy

Researchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center have discovered that triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) cells can develop resistance to frontline, or neoadjuvant, chemotherapy not by acquiring permanent adaptations, but rather transiently turning on molecular pathways that protect the cells.

The study, published in Science Translational Medicine, also identifies a vulnerability that may provide a new treatment option for resistant TNBC.

Among those pathways activated is a metabolic process, known as oxidative phosphorylation, which can be targeted by a small-molecule drug developed by MD Anderson's Therapeutics Discovery division.

"Modern chemotherapy is highly effective for nearly half of patients with triple negative breast cancers," said corresponding author Helen Piwnica-Worms, Ph.D., professor of Experimental Radiation Oncology. "However, the remaining half of women will not fully respond to neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and there currently are no approved treatments to improve outcomes for them. Understanding how tumour cells become resistant will allow us to identify new targets to better treat resistant disease."

According to the American Cancer Society, an estimated 268,000 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer this year, of which 15 to 20 percent will have TNBC.

Standard treatment for patients with TNBC is neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by surgery to remove the tumour.

For women with tumours that don't fully respond to chemotherapy, there is a much higher risk of recurrence and death from the disease, said Piwnica-Worms.

In order to study how TNBC cells become resistant to treatment, the researchers created mouse models, known as patient-derived xenografts (PDXs), of TNBC using tumour samples from patients enrolled in the ARTEMIS clinical trial.

Patients enrolling in ARTEMIS have tumour biopsies taken before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy treatment, which enable researchers to study why some tumours are resistant and discover more effective strategies to bring cures to more patients.

Piwnica-Worms' team identified several PDX models that responded to chemotherapy at first, but eventually developed resistance and resumed tumour growth.

If treatment was paused, however, the residual tumours once again became sensitive to chemotherapy, indicating the resistance was temporary.

Under the microscope, tumours showed distinct changes during treatment, but regrown tumours appeared similar to those before treatment.

Further, an analysis of individual tumour cells showed that the heterogeneity of cells in a given tumour was maintained after treatment, suggesting that chemotherapy did not select for a small subset of resistant cells.

Characterisation of gene expression changes revealed a set of pathways activated as part of the resistant state, which were turned off when chemotherapy was discontinued.

The researchers confirmed many of these molecular changes were mirrored in biopsies taken from ARTEMIS patients.

Hoping to find new treatment targets for resistant TNBC, the researchers discovered that these cells had become dependent on oxidative phosphorylation for energy production.

This pathway is the target of IACS-10759, the first-small molecular discovered and developed by MD Anderson's Therapeutics Discovery division.

When treating the PDX mice with IACS-10759 following chemotherapy treatment, the researchers observed a synergistic effect, suggesting sequential treatment of chemotherapy and IACS-10759 could prolong the duration of treatment response.

IACS-10579 is now in clinical trials for a variety of haematological and solid cancer types.

"Our study provides a compelling rationale for defining additional properties that enable triple negative breast cancers to survive chemotherapy treatment, so that combination therapies can be developed to eradicate this disease," says Piwnica-Worms. "A long-term goal is to avoid the use of chemotherapy in patients with resistant disease and instead employ targeted therapies to avoid unnecessary treatments and harsh side effects."

Source: University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center