Targeting the fibroblast growth factor receptor family in cancer

N Hallinan, S Finn, S Cuffe, S Rafee, K O'Byrne… - Cancer treatment …, 2016 - Elsevier
N Hallinan, S Finn, S Cuffe, S Rafee, K O'Byrne, K Gately
Cancer treatment reviews, 2016Elsevier
Fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) regulate a plethora of biological functions, in both the
embryonic and adult stages of development, binding their cognate receptors and thus
activating a variety of downstream signalling pathways. Deregulation of the FGF/FGFR
signalling axis, observed in multifarious tumor types including squamous non-small cell lung
cancer, occurs through genomic FGFR alterations that drive ligand-independent receptor
signalling or alterations that support ligand-dependent activation. Mutations are not …
Abstract
Fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) regulate a plethora of biological functions, in both the embryonic and adult stages of development, binding their cognate receptors and thus activating a variety of downstream signalling pathways. Deregulation of the FGF/FGFR signalling axis, observed in multifarious tumor types including squamous non-small cell lung cancer, occurs through genomic FGFR alterations that drive ligand-independent receptor signalling or alterations that support ligand-dependent activation. Mutations are not restricted to the tyrosine kinase domain and aberrations appear to be tumor type dependent. As well as its complementarity and synergy with VEGF of particular interest is the interplay between FGFR and EGFR and the ability of these pathways to offer a compensatory signalling escape mechanism when either is inhibited. Hence there exists a rationale for a combinatorial approach to inhibition of these dysregulated pathways to reverse drug resistance. To date, several multi-target tyrosine kinase inhibitors as well as FGFR specific tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), monoclonal antibodies and FGF ligand traps have been developed. Promising preclinical data has resulted in several drugs entering clinical trials. This review explores aberrant FGFR and its potential as a therapeutic target in solid tumors.
Elsevier
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