Met inhibitors for the treatment of gastric cancer: What’s their potential?
Loading...
Files
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Dove Medical Press Ltd
Abstract
Gastric cancer remains a disease with a dismal prognosis. Extensive efforts to find targetable disease drivers in gastric cancer were implemented to improve patient outcomes. Beyond anti-HER2 therapy, MET pathway seems to be culprit of cancer invasiveness with MET-overexpressing tumors having poorer prognosis. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors targeting the HGF/MET pathway were studied in MET-positive gastric cancer, but no substantial benefit was proven. Some patients responded in early phase trials but later developed resistance. Others failed to show any benefit at all. Etiologies of resistance may entail inappropriate patient selection with a lack of MET detection standardization, tumor alternative pathways, variable MET amplification, and genetic variation. Optimizing MET detection techniques and better understanding the MET pathway, as well as tumor bypass mechanisms, are an absolute need to devise means to overcome resistance using targeted therapy alone, or in combination with other synergistic agents to improve outcomes of patients with MET-positive GC. © 2020 El Darsa et al.
Description
Keywords
Gastric cancer, Hgf, Met amplification, Met over-expression, Monoclonal antibodies, Tyrosine kinase inhibitors, Amg 337, Aminotransferase, Capecitabine, Cisplatin, Crizotinib, Emibetuzumab, Epirubicin, Foretinib, Krc 00715, Onartuzumab, Panitumumab, Protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor, Rilotumumab, Savolitinib, Scatter factor receptor, Tivantinib, Unclassified drug, Volitinib, Abdominal pain, Advanced cancer, Anemia, Angiogenesis, Cancer inhibition, Cancer prognosis, Cancer radiotherapy, Cell survival, Diarrhea, Drug safety, Drug tolerability, Epithelial mesenchymal transition, Fatigue, Gene expression, Gene mutation, Gene targeting, Genetic resistance, Genetic variation, Headache, Human, Hyperkalemia, Hypertension, Hyperuricemia, Hypoalbuminemia, Hyponatremia, Immunohistochemistry, Immunoregulation, Lung embolism, Met gene, Nausea, Neutropenia, Overall survival, Pathogenesis, Peripheral edema, Priority journal, Progression free survival, Review, Side effect, Signal transduction, Stomach cancer, Stomach carcinogenesis, Stomach perforation, Thrombocytopenia, Thromboembolism, Tumor microenvironment, Tumor volume, Vomiting