作者
Luca Zammataro,Salvatore Lopez,Stefania Bellone,Francesca Pettinella,Elena Bonazzoli,Emanuele Perrone,Siming Zhao,Gulden Menderes,Gary Altwerger,Chanhee Han,Burak Zeybek,Anna Bianchi,Aránzazu Manzano,Paola Manara,Emiliano Cocco,Natalia Buza,Pei Hui,Serena Wong,Antonella Ravaggi,Eliana Bignotti,Chiara Romani,Paola Todeschini,Laura Zanotti,Franco Odicino,Sergio Pecorelli,Carla Donzelli,Laura Ardighieri,Roberto Angioli,Francesco Raspagliesi,Giovanni Scambia,Jungmin Choi,Weilai Dong,Kaya Bilguvar,Ludmil B. Alexandrov,Dan Arin Silasi,Gloria S. Huang,Elena Ratner,Masoud Azodi,Peter E. Schwartz,Valentina Pirazzoli,Amy L. Stiegler,Titus J. Boggon,Richard P. Lifton,Joseph Schlessinger,Alessandro D. Santin
摘要
Significance The development of novel, effective treatments for patients with advanced/recurrent cervical cancer remains an unmet medical need. Using whole-exome sequencing, we identified multiple genes with recurrent alterations in cervical cancer, including the ERBB2/PI3K/AKT/mTOR, apoptosis, chromatin remodeling, and cell cycle pathways. Using fully sequenced cell lines and xenografts, we found pan-HER (afatinib/neratinib) and PIK3CA (copanlisib) inhibitors to be active, but only transiently effective in controlling the in vivo growth of PIK3CA-mutated cervical tumor xenografts. In contrast, the combination of irreversible pan-HER kinase and PIK3CA inhibitors was highly synergistic and able to induce durable regression of xenografts harboring derangements in the ERBB2/PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway in vivo. These findings suggest a large subset of cervical tumors (>70%) might benefit from existing ERBB2/PIK3CA/AKT/mTOR-targeted drugs.