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  4. Pathway Analysis of Glioblastoma Tissue after Preoperative Treatment with the EGFR Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor Gefitinib-A Phase II Trial
 
research article

Pathway Analysis of Glioblastoma Tissue after Preoperative Treatment with the EGFR Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor Gefitinib-A Phase II Trial

Hegi, Monika E.
•
Diserens, Annie-Claire
•
Bady, Pierre
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2011
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics

Amplification of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) gene is one of the most common oncogenic alterations in glioblastoma (45%) making it a prime target for therapy. However, small molecule inhibitors of the EGFR tyrosine kinase showed disappointing efficacy in clinical trials for glioblastoma. Here we aimed at investigating the molecular effects of the tyrosine kinase inhibitor gefitinib on the EGFR signaling pathway in human glioblastoma. Twenty-two patients selected for reoperation of recurrent glioblastoma were treated within a phase II trial for 5 days with 500 mg gefitinib before surgery followed by postoperative gefitinib until recurrence. Resected glioblastoma tissues exhibited high concentrations of gefitinib (median, 4.1 mu g/g), 20 times higher than respective plasma. EGFR-pathway activity was evaluated with phosphorylation-specific assays. The EGFR was efficiently dephosphorylated in treated patients as compared to a control cohort of 12 patients. However, no significant effect on 12 pathway constituents was detected. In contrast, in vitro treatment of a glioblastoma cell line, BS-153, with endogenous EGFRwt amplification and EGFRvIII expression resulted not only in dephosphorylation of the EGFR, but also of key regulators in the pathway such as AKT. Treating established xenografts of the same cell line as an in vivo model showed dephosphorylation of the EGFR without affecting downstream signal transductors, similar to the human glioblastoma. Taken together, gefitinib reaches high concentrations in the tumor tissue and efficiently dephosphorylates its target. However, regulation of downstream signal transducers in the EGFR pathway seems to be dominated by regulatory circuits independent of EGFR phosphorylation. Mol Cancer Ther; 10(6); 1102-12. (C)2011 AACR.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-11-0048
Web of Science ID

WOS:000291428000018

Author(s)
Hegi, Monika E.
Diserens, Annie-Claire
Bady, Pierre
Kamoshima, Yuta
Kouwenhoven, Mathilde C. M.
Delorenzi, Mauro
Lambiv, Wanyu L.
Hamou, Marie-France
Matter, Matthias S.
Koch, Arend
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Date Issued

2011

Published in
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
Volume

10

Start page

1102

End page

1112

Subjects

Epidermal-Growth-Factor

•

Factor Receptor Inhibitors

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Recurrent Glioblastoma

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Malignant Gliomas

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Cancer-Therapy

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Lung-Cancer

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In-Vivo

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Expression

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Mutations

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Erlotinib

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ISREC  
Available on Infoscience
December 16, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/73984
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