Microenvironment-driven intratumoral heterogeneity in head and neck cancers: clinical challenges and opportunities for precision medicine

被引:63
|
作者
Van den Bossche, Valentin [1 ]
Zaryouh, Hannah [2 ]
Vara-Messler, Marianela [1 ]
Vignau, Julie [1 ]
Machiels, Jean-Pascal [3 ,4 ,5 ]
Wouters, An [2 ]
Schmitz, Sandra [3 ,4 ,5 ]
Corbet, Cyril [1 ]
机构
[1] UCLouvain, Pole Pharmacol & Therapeut FATH, Inst Rech Expt & Clin IREC, Ave Hippocrate 57, B-1200 Brussels, Belgium
[2] Univ Antwerp, Ctr Oncol Res CORE, Integrated Personalized & Precis Oncol Network IP, Univ Pl 1, B-2610 Antwerp, Belgium
[3] UCLouvain, Pole Mol Imaging Radiotherapy & Oncol MIRO, Inst Rech Expt & Clin IREC, Ave Hippocrate 57, B-1200 Brussels, Belgium
[4] Clin Univ St Luc, Dept Med Oncol, Inst Roi Albert II, Ave Hippocrate 10, B-1200 Brussels, Belgium
[5] Clin Univ St Luc, Dept Head & Neck Surg, Ave Hippocrate 10, B-1200 Brussels, Belgium
关键词
Head and neck cancer; Tumor microenvironment; Intratumoral heterogeneity; Therapy resistance; Cancer-associated fibroblasts; Precision medicine; Metabolism; SQUAMOUS-CELL CARCINOMA; PATIENT-DERIVED XENOGRAFTS; HYPOXIA-INDUCIBLE FACTOR-1-ALPHA; TUMOR HYPOXIA; GENETIC-HETEROGENEITY; HUMAN-PAPILLOMAVIRUS; OPEN-LABEL; ACCELERATED RADIOTHERAPY; PROGNOSTIC-SIGNIFICANCE; IN-VITRO;
D O I
10.1016/j.drup.2022.100806
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
Squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (SCCHN) is among the most prevalent cancer types worldwide. Despite multimodal therapeutic approaches that include surgical resection, radiation therapy or concurrent chemoradiation, targeted therapy and immunotherapy, SCCHN is still associated with a poor prognosis for patients with locally advanced or recurrent/metastatic (R/M) diseases. Although next-generation sequencing data from thousands of SCCHN patients have provided a comprehensive landscape of the somatic genomic alterations in this disease, genomic-based precision medicine is not implemented yet in routine clinical use since no satisfactory genetic biomarker has been identified for diagnosis, patient outcome prediction and selection of tailored therapeutic options. The lack of significant improvement in SCCHN patient survival over the last decades stresses the need for reliable predictive biomarkers and new therapeutic strategies for personalized clinical management of SCCHN patients. Targeting the SCCHN-associated microenvironment or the interaction of the latter with cancer cells may represent such paradigm shift in the development of new strategies to treat SCCHN patients, as exemplified by the recent implementation of immune checkpoint inhibitors to improve clinical outcomes by increasing anti-tumor immune responses in SCCHN patients. Several clinical trials are in progress in SCCHN patients to evaluate the activity of monoclonal antibodies and small-molecule inhibitors targeting the tumor microenvironment (TME) at different treatment settings, including combinations with adjuvant surgery, radiation therapy and chemotherapy. This review describes the current knowledge about the influence of the TME on intratumoral heterogeneity and clinical relapse in human SCCHN patients. More precisely, the role of hypoxia as well as the presence of non-cancer cells (e.g. cancer-associated fibroblasts and immune cells) on therapy response of SCCHN cells is highlighted. We also discuss relevant (pre)clinical models that may help integrate the microenvironment-tumor cell interplay in translational research studies for SCCHN. Finally, this review explores potential therapeutic strategies that may exploit the crosstalk between TME and SCCHN cells in order to implement fundamental changes in the tumor treatment paradigm of patients with locally advanced or R/M SCCHN.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 25 条
  • [21] Feasibility and clinical utility of blood based NGS in head and neck carcinomas: A single center experience from precision medicine program
    Dall'Olio, Filippo Gustavo
    Vasseur, Damien
    Loriguet, Lea
    Ferrand, Francois Regis
    Moya-Plana, Antoine
    Tao, Yungan
    Iacob, Mariana
    Benihoud, Karim
    Casiraghi, Odile
    Brenner, Catherine
    Busson, Pierre
    Gorphe, Philippe
    Ponce, Santiago
    Blanchard, Pierre
    Rouleau, Etienne
    Loriot, Yohann
    Lacroix, Ludovic
    Italiano, Antoine
    Breuskin, Ingrid
    Even, Caroline
    CANCER RESEARCH, 2024, 84 (06)
  • [22] Precision medicine for risk prediction of oral complications of cancer therapy-The example of oral mucositis in patients receiving radiation therapy for cancers of the head and neck
    Sonis, Stephen T.
    FRONTIERS IN ORAL HEALTH, 2022, 3
  • [23] DNA ploidy, proliferative capacity and intratumoral heterogeneity in primary and recurrent head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) - Potential implications for clinical management and treatment decisions
    Hass, Holger G.
    Schmidt, Andreas
    Nehls, Otiver
    Kaiser, Stephan
    ORAL ONCOLOGY, 2008, 44 (01) : 78 - 85
  • [24] The Molecular Screening and Therapeutics (MoST) Program: A precision medicine framework for biomarker-driven signal seeking clinical studies for rare cancers.
    Hess, Dominique
    Sebastian, Lucille T.
    Sjoquist, Katrin Marie
    Lee, Chee Khoon
    Hague, Wendy
    Miller, Danielle
    Cowley, Mark
    Qiu, Min Ru
    Fox, Stephen B.
    Joshua, Anthony M.
    Simes, John
    Thomas, David Morgan
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2017, 35
  • [25] PAN-OMIC ANALYSIS OF DIFFUSE INTRINSIC PONTINE GLIOMA FROM CHILDREN ENROLLED IN THE PNOC003 PRECISION MEDICINE TRIAL IDENTIFIES OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES IN CLINICAL IMPLEMENTATION OF A MULTI-OMICS SEQUENCING APPROACH
    Jain, Payal
    Mueller, Sabine
    Liang, Winnie S.
    Panditharatna, Eshini
    Zhang, Bo
    Zhu, Yuankun
    Kambhampati, Madhuri
    Kline, Cassie
    Kilburn, Lindsay
    Gupta, Nalin
    Yang, Xiaodong
    Nazemi, Kellie
    Magge, Suresh N.
    Crawford, John
    Banerjee, Anu
    Packer, Roger J.
    Roos, Alison
    Philips, Joanna
    Solomon, David
    Molinaro, Annette
    Yadavili, Sridevi
    Kuhn, John
    Byron, Sara A.
    Prados, Michael
    Nazarian, Javad
    Berens, Michael
    Resnick, Adam C.
    NEURO-ONCOLOGY, 2019, 21 : 85 - 85