Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma: Current Therapies and Challenges
Authored by Myron R Szewczuk
Abstract
Gastrointestinal (GIJ cancer is an all-encompassing
term that refers to the forms of cancers of the digestive system
including the esophagus, liver, gallbladder, stomach, small intestine,
colon, rectum, anus and pancreas. Of the cancers mentioned, pancreatic
ductal adenocarcinoma (PDACJ is the most deadly form of GI cancer owing
partially to the late detection of this malignancy. At this point of
diagnosis, the disease has metastasized and very few treatment options
are available to patients. The aggressive nature of this cancer can be
attributed to the substantial number of mutations acquired during its
progression and its subsequent resistance to standard therapies such as
chemotherapy and radiationThe heterogeneity of the subpopulations that
are chemoresistant, particularly the tumor initiating population as
known as cancer stem cells, make administrating conventional first-line
treatments such as gemcitabine more difficult. Lastly, the tumor
microenvironment and the early establishment of a metastatic niche by
exosomes that facilitate dissemination of cancer cells to distant organs
also contribute to the incurability of this type of cancer. Here we
discuss the current clinical challenges in treating PDAC and the
possible avenues that should be explored in order to improve current
treatment options available to patients.
Keywords: Pancreatic cancer; PDAC; Cancer therapy; Drug resistance; Cancer stem cells; Alternative therapyIntroduction
Gastrointestinal (GIJ cancers include the group of
cancers that affect the digestive system such as the esophagus,
gallbladder, liver, pancreas, stomach, small intestine, bowel colon and
rectum, and anus. GI cancer is the most common form of cancer. In
particular, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDACJ accounts for the
majority of pancreatic cancers and is one of the leading causes of
cancer-related deaths worldwide [1].
With minimal improvements in treatment outcomes over the last forty
years, lack of effective screening and early detection methods prevent
clinicians from identifying PDAC in a pre- malignant stage [2], resulting in a five-year survival rate of only 5% following diagnosis [3,4].
Current treatment options include surgical resection, neoadjuvant and
adjuvant chemotherapy and radiation. Unfortunately, heterogeneous cancer
cell populations found in primary tumors and secondary micrometastases
renders them resistant to cytotoxic therapies. To overcome these
limitations, future therapies must target and disable the multiple
enabling hallmarks that drive PDAC progression, immune-derived promoters
of tumor development and growth, acquired drug resistance mechanisms,
and pro-metastatic signals in the tumor microenvironment that potentiate
cancer cell dissemination and homing to distant organs. Here, we
provide a brief review of the current treatment options available for
pancreatic cancer and ongoing challenges that need to be overcome to
improve cancer therapy.
Current Therapies and Limitations
Although surgery remains one of the only curative treatment options, less than 20% of patients are surgical candidates [5]. Several poor predictors for successful resection are known: large tumor size [6], high tumor grade [7], positive tumor margins after surgical removal [5], elevated levels of CA 19-9 [8] and lymph node involvement [9].
Surgical PDAC patients remain at high risk for relapse and surgery has
been shown to prolong survival by an average of only 10 months [10].
For patients with the advanced form of the disease that do not meet the
criteria for surgery, radiation and chemotherapy are usually
recommended as treatment options. Radiation therapy aims to eliminate
rapidly proliferating cells in a specific area of the body by delivering
a radioactive agent or high-energy rays that selectively induce DNA
damage in dividing cells. Neoadjuvant radiation and chemotherapy therapy
may be used to shrink an operable tumor prior to surgery. Adjuvant
(post-surgery) radiation can also be used to treat the residual disease
but the efficacy of this option is suboptimal due to its limited
tolerance in normal tissue. The current standard of chemotherapy in the
treatment of PDAC is gemcitabine (20,20-difluoro-20-deoxycytidine;
dFdC), a nucleoside pyrimdine analog inhibiting DNA synthesis [5,11].
However, in non-surgical patients, gemcitabine treatment has been shown
to prolong patient survival by only 4 months and is often used in
palliation. Other neoadjuvant and adjuvant chemotherapeutics used today
include flofirinox (5-fluorouracil, leucovorin, irinotecan, oxaliplatin)
or a combination of gemcitabine with paclitaxel (abraxane),
demonstrating tumor shrinkage in 20-30% of patients and slowing
metastatic disease progression for approximately six months [12].
Ongoing Clinical Challenges for Drug Development
Acquired Gene Mutations and Resistance to Therapy
One of the greatest difficulties in preventing
metastatic disease is reversing the acquired resistance to therapies.
The prevalence of chemoresistance in PDAC has been linked to the
acquisition of tumor-promoting genetic mutations, such as K-ras, p53,
CDKN2a and SMAD4/DPC4 [13]. 90% of PDAC patients also have KRAS2 point mutations, resulting in constitutively expressed Ras [14].
Once activated, Ras initiates a signaling cascade that activates cell
proliferation and survival pathways, increasing cancer cell invasion [15]. Tumor-suppressor gene p53 is inactivated in approximately 80% of pancreatic tumors [16], resulting in impaired DNA damage recognition and repair, impaired apoptosis and deregulated mitosis [17].
Other tumor- suppressor genes encoded in the cdkn2a locus, including
p16Ink4a and p15ARF, are present in about 90% of human pancreatic
cancers [18]
and are implicated in drug-resistance mechanisms. The deregulated
activities of specific membrane drug transporters also play a vital role
in treatment efficacy. For example, human equilibrative nucleoside
transporter-1 (hENT1) is a membrane facilitative transporter that is
used by hydrophilic gemcitabine in order to enter cancer cells [19].
Without hENT1 activity, the rate of gemcitabine entry through the
hydrophobic plasma membrane is negligible, contributing to gemcitabine-
resistance. As major drivers of drug resistance, these genetic and
cellular factors present as targets for drug development and
patient-specific predictors of treatment response.
Clinical Implications of Pancreatic Intratumoral Heterogeneity
Pancreatic tumor heterogeneity refers to the presence
of multiple subpopulations postulated to be derived from a unique
lineage of origin, within a single neoplasm [20].
The occurrence of a tumor-initiating population with the capacity to
self-renew and give rise to differentiated progeny has become an area of
intense investigation. In a comprehensive study assessing 24 different
pancreatic cancers, results revealed an average of 63 genetic mutations
per cancer, spanning 12 signal transduction pathways [21].
Intratumoral heterogeneity at the molecular level within pancreatic
tumors has become of increasing interest because identifying unique
biomarkers can be used as prognostic tools. K-ras mutations, for
example, have been heavily investigated for their prognostic value
because they represent an early stage in driver gene alterations that
are required for disease progression [22].
However, the presence of this mutation in over 90% of pancreatic
cancers, and studies demonstrating its detection in late-stage cancers,
its value as a prognostic tool is diminished [23].
Despite its ineffective as a prognostic tool, when in addition to
CDKN2A, TP53, BRCA2 and SMAD4/DPC4 mutations, they represent key genetic
events that are required in order for PDAC to progress into an
aggressive malignancy [22].
These key driver mutations are consistent across the majority of PDAC,
erroneously providing a homogenous genetic profile; however,
subpopulations within the tumor acquire their own unique genetic
profiles as the architectural ARGHangement of subpopulations can also
vary. For example, two different subpopulations can intermix, or they
can be separated by a physical bARGHier (such as blood vessels) or by a
difference in their microenvironment, both of which may generate
differences in how these subpopulations respond to therapy [24].
Theoretically, because subpopulations within a tumor can be under the
selective pressure of their microenvironment and bARGHiers, each unique
tumor cell population can have its own repertoire of potential
therapeutic targets.
Targeting Pancreatic Cancer Stem Cells
Cancer stem cells (CSC) present another major
obstacle in the treatment of PDAC. These dedifferentiated cells have
been shown to maintain long-term tumorigenic potential, and are able to
regrow new micrometastases [25], under the regulation of the surrounding tumor microenvironment (TME) [26]. Li et al. [25]
identified a small population of pancreatic cancer stem cells with a
characteristic CD44+/CD24+/ESA+ phenotype and constitute 0.2-0.8% of the
pancreatic cancer stem cell population [25].
The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) has been a potential target of
interest due to its involvement in the proliferation of CSCs.
Phosphorylation of the s6 ribosomal protein (s6rp) by p70s6 kinase, a
downstream target of mTOR previously shown in the literature to be a
reliable marker for the mTOR signaling pathway was found in only a small
subset of pancreatic cancer cells [27,28].
Rapamycin inhibition of mTOR resulted in a
significant reduction of s6rp in pancreatic CSCs. However, the
combination of cyclopamine (sonic hedgehog inhibitor), rapamycin, and
gemcitabine (CRG) resulted in the elimination of virtually the entire
CD133+ pancreatic CSC population [28].
This suggests that the combination of various therapeutic targets of
CSC such as genes located in developmental pathways, such as
hedgehog,Wnt, Notch, CXCR4 and Met, in combination with chemotherapy are
capable of moderating the CSC pool. In addition, targeting apoptotic
pathways such as DR5 and nodal-activin may also provide significant
therapeutic benefit [25,29]. Nodal-activin are members of the TGF-k
family, which are essential for embryonic stem cell (ESC) maintenance.
Components of this signaling cascade are over expressed in pancreatic
CSCs, with nodal highly expressed in pancreatic cancer tissue during the
development and progression of PDAC, but not detectable in normal
pancreatic tissue. Nodal inhibition was able to chemosensitize
inherently chemoresistant pancreatic CSCs to therapy [30].
These findings support the notion that pancreatic intratumoral
heterogeneity and CSCs are major enabling components that contribute to
drug resistance and disease progression. A better understanding of CSC
populations and how they interact with one another and the surrounding
TME will enable further progress in the treatment of pancreatic cancer.
Exosomes in Establishment of the Metastatic Niche
PDAC is characterized by its late detection, which
may be correlated with its high metastatic potential. Current screening
methods lack the sensitivity to detect early onset with 80% of PDAC
patients presenting with metastases at the time of diagnosis [31].
Metastatic disease is difficult to treat with conventional
chemotherapeutic methods due to their unique genetic repertoire, size
and location within a tissue relative to the primary tumor [32].
Therefore, it is important to elucidate the molecular events that
mediate the development of metastatic disease. Exosomes are
extracellular membrane-bound vesicles containing nucleic acids and
proteins [31]. Exosomes have been implicated in the establishment of a premetastatic niche in liver metastases of patients with PDAC [33]
and have been proposed as early detection tools as they circulate in
the bloodstream, which make them an important area of study [31].
Exosome-mediated development of a metastatic TME is
proposed to involve the release of PDAC exosomes containing macrophage
migration inhibitor factor (MIFJ to preferentially fuse with Kupffer
Cells (KCJ of the liver [33].
This leads to KC secreting TGF-p, which promotes the release of
fibronectin by hepatic stellate cells, generating a pro-inflammatory
microenvironment and recruiting macrophages [33]. Inhibition of MIF leads to the elimination of the liver premetastatic niche and prevents metastasis [31].
Recently glypican-1 (GPC1J, a cancer exosome surface proteoglycan, has
been investigated as an early detection biomarker as it is enriched on
the surface of exosomes released from primary tumors. Its expression is
also correlated with the presence of K-ras mutations found in pancreatic
lesions that are undetectable by conventional means [31].
The efficacy of exosomes as mediators of metastasis has important
implications on early detection strategies and possible therapeutic
targets as they circulate the blood and are known mediators of
intercellular communication.
Paracrine signals from pancreatic tumor cells are
able to induce a desmoplastic reaction, characterized by the
extracellular proliferation of leukocytes, fibroblasts, endothelial
cells, neuronal cells, and production of collagen type I and hyaluron[34].Desmoplasia results in the formation of a thick stromal environment around pancreatic cancer cells [34]
resulting in a mechanical bARGHier for drug delivery and is thought to
contribute to the anti-angiogenic and hypoxic environment characteristic
of PDAC, supporting tumor formation, progression and metastasis[35].Studies
have demonstrated that desmoplasia-promoting signals originate from the
K-ras mutant oncogene in the tumor epithelium [36].
Sonic hedgehog (SHHJ is also overexpressed in pancreatic cancer and
results in the induction of extracellular fibroblasts, contributing to
their growth and differentiation [36].
Furthermore, growth factors such as TGF-p, platelet-derived growth
factor (PDGF) and fibroblast growth factor (FGF) activate pancreatic
stellate cells into myofibroblasts capable of secreting ECM components
that further reduce the vascularization of the primary tumor [37].
Many proteins expressed by stromal cells have been correlated with poor
prognosis and drug resistance, including COX-2, PDGF receptor, vascular
endothelial growth factor (VEGFJ, stromal-derived factor (SDFJ,
chemokines, integrins, secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine
(SPARC), and SHH elements [35,37].
Immune-Regulated Tumorigenesis
Notably, the dense stroma is characterized by a
tumor- promoting immunosuppressive environment. Using a CD40 antibody
combined with gemcitabine therapy, researchers have attempted to reverse
immune suppression and drive anti-tumor T-cell responses in patients
with non-resectable pancreatic cancer. Studies have shown that this dual
combination results in tumor regression by stimulating tumor-associated
macrophages (TAM) to attack and degrade the stroma [38].
To date, PDAC treatment has proved most effective in patients with
locally advanced disease, particularly in patients with wild-type DPC4
tumors, as they are known to be less prone to metastasis and possess
higher stromal content. However, primary tumors that have already
metastasized cannot be effectively treated with stromal-targeting agents
because distant metastases arising from this cancer do not have a
hypovascularized stroma [39].
Several cell types involved in the desmoplastic reaction, including
TAMs, cancer associated fibroblasts, regulatory T-cells and myeloid
derived suppressor cells contribute to tumorigenesis. K-ras-dependent
signaling molecules have also been shown to up regulate
granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSFJ, thus
promoting the maturation of myeloid progenitor cells into myeloid
derived suppressor cells [40].
Unlike the stroma, the primary pancreatic tumor
and/or distant micrometastases can be exposed to a highly inflammatory
microenvironment. Cancer-associated inflammation can contribute to drug
resistance, selection of CSCs and desmoplasia. Nuclear factor kappa B (NFkBJ
signaling, critical for the inducible expression of cellular and viral
genes involved in inflammation, has been found to be constitutively
activated in pancreatic cancer cells [41]. Inducible cyclooxygenase (COX)-2, a downstream target gene of NF-kB,
is not normally expressed but can be up regulated by cytokines, growth
factors and certain tumor-promoter genes. It is involved in
prostaglandin synthesis, promotion of angiogenesis, immune evasion and
inhibition of apoptosis. COX-2 has been found to be overexpressed in
pancreatic adenocarcinomas and is localized to the cytoplasm of the
tumor cells as opposed to the surrounding stromal or immune cells [41].
Conclusion
Several clinical challenges remain in the treatment
of pancreatic cancer. In addition to its advanced-stage detection, there
have been no significant improvements in patient survival rates or in
the development of effective therapies. These challenges arise from the
understanding that the cancer cell program is adaptive, self-sustaining
and invasive, and that despite therapy, aggressive phenotypes will
survive and metastasize. Thus, future studies must not rely on targeting
a single oncogenic or mitotic pathway, but must suppress the multiple
stages of tumorigenesis of pancreatic cancer cells and their enabling
microenvironment.
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