ecancermedicalscience

Review

Repurposing of drugs for triple negative breast cancer: an overview

Andrea Spini1,2, Sandra Donnini3, Pan Pantziarka4, Sergio Crispino4,5 and Marina Ziche1

1Department of Medicine, Surgery and Neuroscience, University of Siena, Siena 53100, Italy

2Service de Pharmacologie Médicale, INSERM U1219, University of Bordeaux, Bordeaux 33000, France

3Department of Life Sciences, University of Siena, Siena 53100, Italy

4Anticancer Fund, Strombeek Bever 1853, Belgium

5ASSO, Siena, Italy


Abstract

Breast cancer (BC) is the most frequent cancer among women in the world and it remains a leading cause of cancer death in women globally. Among BCs, triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive, and for its histochemical and molecular characteristics is also the one whose therapeutic opportunities are most limited. The REpurposing Drugs in Oncology (ReDO) project investigates the potential use of off patent non-cancer drugs as sources of new cancer therapies. Repurposing of old non-cancer drugs, clinically approved, off patent and with known targets into oncological indications, offers potentially cheaper effective and safe drugs. In line with this project, this article describes a comprehensive overview of preclinical or clinical evidence of drugs included in the ReDO database and/or PubMed for repurposing as anticancer drugs into TNBC therapeutic treatments.

Keywords: triple negative breast cancer, repositioning, non-cancer drug, preclinical studies, clinical studies

Correspondence to: Marina Ziche
Email: marina.ziche@unisi.it

Published: 13/07/2020
Received: 12/02/2020

Publication costs for this article were supported by ecancer (UK Charity number 1176307).

Copyright: © the authors; licensee ecancermedicalscience. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.


Background

Breast cancer (BC) is the most frequent cancer among women in the world. Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a type of BC that does not express oestrogen receptors, progesterone receptors and epidermal growth factor receptors-2/Neu (HER2) and accounts for the 16% of BCs approximatively [1, 2]. Due to its lack of response to hormone and targeted therapies, the number of therapeutic opportunities is limited [3, 4]. TNBC patients are difficult to treat, with unfavourable prognosis and are generally administered with the standard chemotherapy. At the moment, novel treatment approaches, such as immunotherapy, as well the repurposing of old drugs currently used for indications other than TNBC, is under investigation. In this context, we have previously reviewed the preclinical and clinical anticancer efficacy and safety of beta blockers in TNBC [5].

Drug repurposing is the application of an old drug to a new disease indication: this holds the promise of rapid clinical impact at a lower cost than de novo drug development [6]. In oncology, where new treatments in the last years are becoming more expensive due to the introduction of innovative therapies such as targeted therapies and immunotherapies, there is an increased interest at the use of already clinically approved non-cancer drugs, off patent and with known targets, as possible cancer treatments [7]. One study published by Pantziarka et al [8], point the spotlight on this matter building up a project about drug repurposing in the treatment of cancer. The REpurposing Drugs in Oncology (ReDO) project investigates the potential use of licensed non-cancer medications as sources of new cancer strategies. ReDO project has used a literature-based approach to identify licensed non-cancer drugs with published evidence of anticancer activity. At present, data of 268 drugs have been included in the REDO database (ReDO_DB) [8].

In line with this project, we searched in PubMed for published preclinical or clinical evidence of anticancer activity for all drugs included in the ReDO_DB for TNBC. Specifically, starting from each drug present in ReDO_DB, we searched in PubMed for published preclinical and clinical evidence of anticancer activity for TNBC. The strings were composed by the name of the drugs and specific keywords related to TNBC.

An additional search string was used to investigate potential clinical evidence about drugs not included in ReDO_DB or references not retrieved in the first search. The string was composed by three blocks concerning keywords related to TNBC, repurposing and study type, respectively. Both strings are provided in the supplementary file (Table S1). Observational or clinical trials for which a TNBC cohort was defined were included. The articles that were not written in English were excluded.

Moreover, clinicaltrials.gov [9] was searched for ongoing or completed clinical studies on drug repurposing and TNBC. All searches were performed on March 2019, and the information extracted were the following: 1) preclinical studies: number of studies per drug and pharmacological activity; 2) clinical studies: study type, country, study period, population studies, exclusion criteria, age, follow up, arms, treatments and outcomes; 3) clinicaltrials.gov: number of studies per drug.

The aim of this paper is to give to clinicians and scientists a comprehensive overview about preclinical and clinical studies, including clinical trials, present in literature on the repurposing of old-licensed drugs for TNBC.

We found 188 preclinical studies references (see Supplementary Material), 18 clinical references [1026] and 16 references on clinical trials.gov on drug repurposing for TNBC [9].

Preclinical studies

Using the PubMed database, we found preclinical evidence on TNBC models (cell lines and xenograft models of TNBC) for 84 out of 268 old drugs (31.3%) present in the ReDO_DB. For 42 of the 84 drugs, only one reference was retrieved (Table S2). Thirteen studies referred to the anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic and immune-stimulating effects of metformin, thirteen to the cytotoxic and anti-metastatic effects of chloroquine, eleven to the anti-proliferative and anti-invasive effects of simvastatin, eight to the anti-inflammatory and anti-angiogenic effects of acid acetylsalicylic and eight studies to the anti-angiogenic, anti-proliferative and anti-apoptotic effects of zoledronic acid. Main indications for drugs with preclinical evidence of efficacy on TNBC model were various and heterogeneous including epilepsy, analgesia, hypertension, diabetes, insomnia and other.

Clinical studies

Table 1 shows all 17 clinical references collected (the article of Spera et al analyses two different retrospective studies on beta blockers efficacy and safety on TNBC [13], and the articles of Hagasewa et al [15] and Ishikawa et al [16] analysed the same cohort of patients). Clinical evidence on twelve licensed drugs was found, and of these drugs, eleven out of 268 (4.1%) were included in ReDO_DB. Eleven studies out of 18 were retrospective studies [1013, 17, 19, 20, 22, 25, 26], six were phase II and [1416, 18, 21, 23] one was a phase I clinical trial [24] (see Figure 1 for more details). Retrospective studies ranged from 1995 to 2016, and six out of eleven studies analysed a USA cohort of patients [10, 12, 19, 20, 25, 26]. Eight studies were performed using medical records [10, 12, 17, 19, 20, 22, 25, 26], one was based on disease registries [11] and two reported the results of previous clinical trials [13]. Of the 18 clinical studies collected, four analysed the efficacy of beta blockers (BB) [1113], five of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) [1721], two of zoledronic acid [15, 16], one of metformin [10], one of tetramolybdate [14], one of itraconazole [22], one of esomeprazole [23], one of mifepristone [24] and two of statins [25, 26]. Outcomes retrieved from clinical studies were grouped, whenever possible, in pharmacological categories and summarised in Table 2.

Table 1. Characteristics of clinical studies about repurposing of old drugs for TNBC treatment.

Figure 1. Type of studies per drug. This shows the number of clinical trials (only phase 1 and 2 studies were found) and observational studies conducted per drug/pharmacological classes.

Beta blockers (BBs)

BBs were evaluated on postmenopausal women with operated early primary TNBC, on women with invasive TNBC (receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy), and on women with advanced or nodal positive TNBC. Study populations ranged from 35 patients to 1,417 patients. In the study of Melhem-Bertrandt et al [12], using medical chart and pharmacy data from the Breast Cancer Management System Database in the USA, women with invasive TNBC receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus BBs were compared to patients receiving only neoadjuvant chemotherapy between 1995 and 2007. Hazard ratio of recurrence free survival for women administered with chemotherapy plus BBs was 0.30 (95% CI, 0.10–0.87; p = 0.027) and hazard ratio of overall survival was 0.35 (95% CI, 0.12–1.00; p = 0.05) [12]. Also, in the retrospective study of Botteri et al [11] using Breast Cancer and Cardiology Division Databases in Italy and analysing 800 postmenopausal women diagnosed and operated for early primary TNBC between 1997 and 2008, BB users showed significant benefit when compared to not BB users. Breast cancer related events where lower in BB users (13.6% versus 27.9%; p = 0.02) and hazard ratio of metastasis and BC death were significant (0.32: 95% CI 0.12–0.90; p = 0.031; 0.42: 95% CI 0.18–0.97; p = 0.042, respectively). The study of Spera et al [13], using data of a randomised, double blind clinical trial (ROSE/TRIO-012), showed significant benefit in women with advanced TNBC using BBs when compared to not users about progression free survival (Hazard ratio = 0.52; 95% CI, 0.34–0.80; p = 0.002) but not in overall survival (Hazard ratio = 0.87; 95% CI 0.58–1.31; p = 0.504). The second study presented by Spera et al [13] using also data from another randomised, double blind clinical trial (BCIRG-005) about women with node positive TNBC did not show any significant benefit of relapse free survival and overall survival (Hazard ratio = 0.69; 95% CI, 0.35–1.34; p = 0.269; 0.73; 95% CI, 0.35–1.48; p = 0.38, respectively).

 

Table 2. Outcomes for each clinical study.

Metformin

The retrospective study of Bayraktar et al [10] using medical chart and pharmacy data from the Breast Cancer Management System Database compared women who received adjuvant chemotherapy with or without metformin in the USA between 1995 and 2007. In total, 1,448 patients (63 diabetic patients receiving metformin, 67 diabetic patients not receiving metformin and 1318 not diabetic patients). The 5 years survival estimates for distant metastasis free survival were 73% in the metformin group, 66% in the non-metformin group and 60% in the non-diabetic group (p = 0.23). Overall survival was 67% in the metformin group, 69% in the non-metformin group and 66% in the non-diabetic group (p = 0.58). Recurrence free survival was 65% in the metformin group, 64% in the non-metformin group and 54% in the non-diabetic group (0.38). Also, after adjustments, no significant survival outcomes were obtained.

Tetramolybdate

The primary endpoint of phase II open label single arm study of Chan et al [14] was to assess the change in VEGFR2 endothelial progenitor cells in women treated with tetrathiomolybdate. The study, performed on 36 women with stage II/III TNBC during adjuvant setting, showed that two year event free survival was 90%.

Zoledronic acid

The articles of Hasegawa et al [15] and Ishikawa [16] referred to the same phase II, open label, randomised study but analysed different outcomes in the same cohort of patients (34 women with stage IIA/IIIB TNBC) treated with zoledronic acid plus chemotherapy versus chemotherapy in neoadjuvant setting. Pathological complete response was not significant (p = 0.112) when comparing neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus zoledronic acid (6/17 (35.3%) CI: 12.6–58.0) with chemotherapy alone (2/17 (11.8%) CI: 0.0–27.1). Also for the 3 years disease free survival, neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus zoledronic acid showed no significant benefit compared to the neoadjuvant treatment alone (p = 0.077) despite the fact that the percentage of patients in treatment with zoledronic acid was higher compared to the other arm (94.1% versus 70.6%).

NSAIDs

Celecoxib was analysed in two studies: the first, a phase II randomised study of Pierga et al [21] performed between 2004 and 2007, analysed 23 women with stage II/III TNBC comparing chemotherapy alone with chemotherapy plus celecoxib. The authors stated that celecoxib did not improve pathological complete response rates, but no specific comparison on this outcome were shown in the article for TNBC patients. The second study, a phase II multicentre open-label single arm study of Chow et al [18], analysed women with primary breast cancer. Unfortunately, only two patients with primary TNBC were included and authors could not show any result about this cohort.

Aspirin was analysed in two retrospective studies. The first retrospective study of Shiao et al [19] that collected medical records from University of Texas Southwestern TNBC registry, analysed a cohort of 222 women with stage II/III TNBC in the USA between 2005 abd 2013. Sixty-five women were treated with anti-platelet therapy (as aspirin or clopidogrel) and 157 with no anti-platelet therapy. A percentage of patients in both arms (6.3% and 7.1%, respectively) did not receive chemotherapy. Five years disease free survival and 5 years distant metastasis hazard ratios was significantly improved in favour of the first arm (anti-platelet 80.4%, no anti-platelet 62.3%, HR: 0.503 (0.261–0.970); p = 0.04; anti-platelet 8.8%, no anti-platelet 31.9%, HR: 0.310 (0.132–0.729); p = 0.007, respectively). Five years overall survival hazard ratio was not significant between the two arms (HR: 0.652 (0.343–1.239); p = 0.192). The second retrospective study of Williams et al [20] performed in USA used electronic medical records of 147 women with primary operable stages I-III TNBC (114 never used aspirin, 19 before diagnosis, and 14 after diagnosis) to analyse overall survival and disease-free survival between 2005 and 2013. Results of this study indicated that aspirin may have an impact on the pathogenesis of TNBC but do not seem to affect breast cancer survival when used after cancer diagnosis (results were presented only for the total cohort of breast cancer patients and not for TNBC subtype).

Finally, Retsky et al [17] showed the updated results of a retrospective study performed in Belgium using medical records between 2003 and 2008 [27], in which ketorolac plus chemotherapy was compared to chemotherapy alone in women who underwent mastectomy with axillary dissection. No information about the cohort (as for the number of patients with TNBC, age, etc…) was reported. Also, for the results the authors said that the group receiving chemotherapy plus ketorolac showed a ‘far superior disease free survival in the first few years after surgery’ but no data were shown in particular about TNBC.

Itraconazole

The article of Tsubamoto et al [22] reported the results of a retrospective study that used medical records of the Kohan hospital in Japan between 2008 and 2012 to analye response rate, median progression-free survival and median overall survival of thirteen patients. TNBC patients who progressed after prior chemotherapy were treated with chemotherapy in combination with itraconazole. No comparison was made. The authors showed that response rate was 62% ([CI], 35%–88%), progression free survival was 10.8 months (95%CI, 7.6–15.3) and overall survival was 20.4 months (95%CI: 13.1–41.4 months).

Esomeprazole

The phase II, open label, randomised study of Wang et al [23] analysed a cohort of 15 women with metastatic or recurrent TNBC (seven receiving only chemotherapy, two esomeprazole low dose and six esomeprazole high dose). The authors showed that the time to progression of patients receiving esomeprazole when compared to chemotherapy was significantly higher (10.7 versus 5.8 months; p = 0.011).

Mifepristone

In the Phase I, randomised study of Nanda and colleagues performed in USA, four women with metastatic or locally advanced TNBC were analysed (those patients were allocated to mifepristone plus paclitaxel or placebo). Unfortunately, no information about patients allocation, nor any outcome information could be retrieved from this article [24].

Statins

The retrospective study of Shaitelman et al [26] used medical records from the MD Anderson Cancer Centre to investigate if women with stage I–III TNBC receiving statins at any time from diagnosis. The authors showed that patients receiving statins did not get any advantage compared to the non-statin users group (0.82 (0.57–1.16); 0.70 (0.47–1.03) relative risk of recurrence and breast cancer death, respectively); when a multivariate analysis was performed (taking in consideration cholesterol and triglyceride values, stage and chemotherapy, the authors showed that statin use was predictive for OS (HR: 0.10, p = 0.026, 95% CI: 0.01–0.76).

The retrospective study of Lacerda et al [25] using Breast Cancer Management database at MD Anderson Cancer Centre in USA between 1995 and 2011, analysed the risk of loco-regional recurrence at 3 years associated to the use of statins, in patients with inflammatory breast cancer who received adjuvant post-mastectomy radiotherapy. 102 patients underwent post-mastectomy radiation (86 patients) or post-mastectomy radiation plus statins (16 patients). Unfortunately no information about the outcome in TNBC patients was shown.

Clinicaltrials.gov

Searching the web site of clinicaltrials.gov (clinicaltrials.gov), we found only 17 drugs out of 286 presented in the ReDo_DB with ongoing or completed clinical trials for TNBC. Table 3 shows the list of trials and the recruitment status for each drug. As shown in Table 3, most part of the drugs present only one or few studies published on this website. In total, three studies are recruiting for the assessment of atorvastatin, two for metformin, two for mifepristone, and three for zoledronic acid.


Future directions

This review presents an overview of all the evidences about the repurposing of old, licensed, non-cancer-drugs in the treatment of TNBC, starting from preclinical evidence and going through current clinical trials. ReDO is an ambitious project aiming to investigate the repurposing of non-cancer-drugs in oncology, and ReDO_DB is a powerful tool that need to be dynamically implemented with recent findings, by adding to the database new drugs for which there are preclinical evidence, and by giving visitors a specific PubMed search string for each tumour and tumour subtypes. The ReDO approach is based on published literature and does not aim to identify new active compounds against cancer. Thus, the database does not include potential repurposing candidates identified through in silico modelling or other computational pharmacological approaches that, despite the interest for the research [2831], unless validated by preclinical studies, represent only future hypothetical repurposed drugs and far from the aim of the ReDO project. The project, in particular, aims to drive scientist attention to investigate already approved non cancer-drugs in the oncology setting. Using this ReDO_DB, we found out that despite a lot of preclinical evidence was produced for drugs included in the database for the treatment of TNBC, only few of them were tested in clinical trials. Moreover, in clinical trials only few of the studies used a large sample of cases and gave explicit results on the repurposing of old drugs for TNBC. Some of the studies did not report any result for TNBC cohort when this is a part of a bigger BC cohort.

Beta Blockers (BBs) seem to be the more promising drugs in the repurposing for the treatment of TNBC. Three articles showed significant benefits of these drugs in women with advanced TNBC and in early primary TNBC patients treated with the combination of chemotherapy plus BBs [1113]. Unfortunately, in clinicaltrials.gov we found no studies that specifically attempt to evaluate BBs within clinical trials for TNBC patients. One triple blinded phase II randomised trial evaluated the use of pre-operative propranolol (seven days before surgery) compared to placebo in 60 women with early stage surgically-resectable breast cancer. [32]. The authors showed that the treatment with propranolol reduced intra-tumoral mesenchymal transition and promoted immune cell infiltration reducing biomarkers associated with metastatic potential. Unfortunately, authors did not present results stratified for breast cancer sub-type.

While BBs demonstrated to be beneficial in the treatment of TNBC, metformin, a promising molecule in preclinical studies, did not show any efficacy in the treatment of women with TNBC. Bayraktar et al [10] showed that metformin does not improve survival outcomes in a population of TNBC women when compared to not users. Of note, two studies on the use of metformin in clinicaltrials.gov on TNBC patients are ongoing.

The articles of Shiao et al [19] and Williams et al [20] showed conflicting results on aspirin. While the first study showed a significant survival benefit in women with stage II/III by the use of aspirin, Williams et al [20] did not show this benefit in the breast cancer population examined (women with operable stage I-III TNBC).

Despite many studies trying to evaluate the use of statins in breast cancer treatment [3336], in the literature search on PubMed, we retrieved only two retrospective studies on their use in the TNBC cohort. The article of Shaitelman et al [26] reported a non-significant improvement of OS for patients in the statin group (with the exception of the multivariate analysis), while the second study of Lacerda et al [25] did not show any results for TNBC patients.

Table 3. Ongoing trials found in Clinicaltrials.gov.

Other authors showed significant results on the survival of TNBC patients treated with esomeprazole. Recently, one phase II study on activity of omeprazole on patients with operable TNBC independent of baseline Fatty acid synthase (FASN) expression was presented at the ASCO meeting. [37] In vitro, proton pump inhibitors inhibit FASN activity and induce apoptosis in breast cancer cell lines. In this study, omeprazole in combination with anthracycline-taxane (AC-T) was administered to 42 patients until surgery, and pathologic complete response (pCR) was investigated. FASN positivity significantly decreased with omeprazole from 0.53 (SD = 0.25) at baseline to 0.38 (SD = 0.30; p = 0.02), and the drug was well tolerated with no known grade 3 or 4 toxicities. Furthermore, the pCR rate was 71.4% (95% CI: 51.3–86.8) in FASN patients and 71.8 % (95% CI: 55.1–85.0) in all enrolled patients, demonstrating that the omeprazole in addition to neoadjuvant AC-T yields a promising pCR rate without adding toxicity.

For those drugs collected in ReDO_DB with favourable preclinical evidence or whose retrospective clinical trials were not so large to provide strong evidence, large retrospective cohort studies are needed to evaluate effectiveness. Further, as for BBs that have proven by retrospective studies to be effective in the treatment of TNBC patients, randomised clinical trials might be important to confirm the evidence of the repurposing.


Final remarks

Drug repurposing is a highly interesting novel strategy for the oncology community and ReDO_DB is a powerful tool that can give authors the opportunity to investigate weather non-anticancer drugs might be effective in cancer treatment. Some precision medicine studies, based on omics data, have included repurposed drugs and have reported interesting case reports of responses from patients [38, 39], however no one on TNBC. Due to the low number of therapeutic opportunities approved for TNBC, repurposing of old drugs seems a valuable approach for this particular type of cancer.

From the literature retrieved, BBs seemed to be the more promising drugs for the repurposing, while evidence about other drugs as NSAIDs still need to be assessed or proven for the treatment of TNBC.


Conflicts of interest

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest


Authors' contributions

MZ and SC conceived the study. AS extracted the data. SD supervised the data extraction. MZ, SD, SC, AS, and PP contributed to the interpretation and discussion of study results. AS and SD drafted the manuscripts. All authors revised and approved the final version of the paper.


Funding

This study was supported by Fondazione Decima Regio ‘Olga e Raimondo Curri’, Via Cimarra 44-B, Roma.


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Supplementary tables

Table S1. Search strings.

Table S2. Preclinical references for repurposing of drugs for TNBC by ReDO DB.

 

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