Expert opinion on pharmacotherapy
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Expert Opin Pharmacother · Jan 2016
ReviewCombination dabrafenib and trametinib in the management of advanced melanoma with BRAFV600 mutations.
In the 40-50% of advanced melanoma patients with tumors harboring BRAF V600E and V600 K mutations, BRAF inhibitors such as dabrafenib are a highly effective treatment. However, most patients develop resistance after several months on treatment. The addition of a MEK inhibitor, such as trametinib, to BRAF inhibition mitigates one key pathway of resistance, further increasing response rates and improving survival. ⋯ Combination therapy with dabrafenib and trametinib improves response rate, progression-free survival and overall survival when compared to dabrafenib or vemurafenib alone. The addition of trametinib to dabrafenib changes the adverse event profile, making hyperkeratosis and cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas less common but side effects such as fever and nausea more common. How dabrafenib/trametinib is best sequenced with other effective treatments such as immune checkpoint blockade remains uncertain.
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Expert Opin Pharmacother · Jan 2016
ReviewLanreotide for the treatment of gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors.
The prevalence of gastropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (GEP-NETs), a largely sporadically occurring group of neoplasms, has rapidly increased. NET diagnoses often occur late and entail treatment challenges; treatment beyond surgical resection is typically required. Somatostatin analogs (SSAs), the cornerstone of GEP-NET therapy, target somatostatin receptors on NET cell surfaces and can ameliorate NET-related symptoms and prevent tumor progression. ⋯ The role of SSAs in NET treatment was historically one of symptom management. Although this is a critical therapeutic component, ideal treatment would include prevention of tumor progression. As GEP-NETs are biologically diverse, progression prevention can be difficult, depending on primary tumor site and functional status. Recent data indicate that lanreotide significantly prolonged progression-free survival in metastatic GEP-NET patients. Practice patterns seem to be shifting toward using SSAs as first-line therapy. Response to SSAs has typically been categorized as either symptomatic or biochemical. However, SSA use to prevent tumor progression will lead to a new, objective response category based on tumor growth.
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Expert Opin Pharmacother · Jan 2016
ReviewReversing neuromuscular blockade: inhibitors of the acetylcholinesterase versus the encapsulating agents sugammadex and calabadion.
Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (neostigmine, edrophonium) and encapsulating agents (sugammadex and calabadion) can be used to reverse residual neuromuscular blockade (NMB). ⋯ The therapeutic range of acetylcholinesterase-inhibitors is narrow and effectiveness studies demonstrate clinicians don't use these unspecific reversal agents effectively to increase postoperative respiratory safety. The encapsulating drugs sugammadex and calabadion reverse all levels of NMB, and complete recovery of muscle strength can be achieved almost immediately after administration. For this reason encapsulating agents can be used as a solution for "cannot intubate cannot ventilate"- situations. Poor binding selectivity of encapsulating agents carries the risk of displacement of the NMBA by a competitively binding drug, which may lead to recurarization. In order to avoid side-effects, related to unspecific binding of endogenous proteins and drugs administered perioperatively it is prudent to titrate the dose of reversal agents to the minimal effective dose, depending on the depth of neuromuscular transmission block identified by neuromuscular transmission monitoring. Calabadions provide a diversified (increased binding selectivity) and expanded (reversal of benzylisoquinolines) spectrum of possible indications.
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Advanced breast cancer is incurable for most patients with limited therapeutic options. As such, there is a critical need for new and novel agents that lack cross-resistance and mitigate overlapping toxicities. ⋯ Etirinotecan pegol demonstrates anti-tumor activity and improved tolerability in patients with refractory metastatic breast cancer. As a novel topoisomerase I inhibitor in breast cancer, etirinotecan pegol holds great therapeutic potential, allowing the challenge of resistance in the advanced disease setting to be addressed.
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Expert Opin Pharmacother · Jan 2016
ReviewEfficacy of trebananib (AMG 386) in treating epithelial ovarian cancer.
Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the leading cause of death among gynecologic cancers. The majority of women are diagnosed with advanced stage disease. It is considered a chemosensitive cancer with a high initial response rate to first-line platinum and taxane-based chemotherapy. However, most patients with advanced EOC will relapse with subsequent resistance to conventional chemotherapy and ultimately succumb to their disease. Therefore, new therapeutic agents and strategies are desperately needed to improve the outcomes in patients with advanced EOC. ⋯ Targeting angiopoietin-Tie-2 pathway represents a promising alternative approach to tumor anti-angiogenesis with a distinct toxicity profile from the VEGF-dependent pathway inhibitors. However, there are still many questions to be answered regarding the optimal treatment schedules, maintenance regimens, duration of maintenance therapy, and the best combination strategy. Currently there is no reliable surrogate molecular, cellular, or genetic marker that would definitively predict response to anti-angiogenic therapy. Identification of certain relevant and predictive biomarkers in the future may optimize treatment's efficacy by distinguishing the subset group of patients with EOC that would derive the most benefit from existing antiangiogenic treatment regimens.