Breast cancer is the most common cause of cancer and cancer death worldwide. Although most patients present with localized breast cancer and may be rendered disease-free with local therapy, distant recurrence is common and is the primary cause of death from the disease. Adjuvant systemic therapies are effective in reducing the risk of distant and local recurrence, including endocrine therapy, anti-HER2 therapy, and chemotherapy, even in patients at low risk of recurrence. The widespread use of adjuvant systemic therapy has contributed to reduced breast cancer mortality rates. Adjuvant cytotoxic chemotherapy regimens have evolved from single alkylating agents to polychemotherapy regimens incorporating anthracyclines and/or taxanes. This review summarizes key milestones in the evolution of adjuvant systemic therapy in general, and adjuvant chemotherapy in particular. Although adjuvant treatments are routinely guided by predictive factors for endocrine therapy (hormone receptor expression) and anti-HER2 therapy (HER2 overexpression), predicting benefit from chemotherapy has been more challenging. Randomized studies are now in progress utilizing multiparameter gene expression assays that may more accurately select patients most likely to benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy.
The tumor suppressor p53 is often inactivated via its interaction with endogenous
inhibitors mouse double minute 4 homolog (MDM4 or MDMX) or mouse double minute 2 homolog
(MDM2), which are frequently overexpressed in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and
other cancers. Pharmacological disruption of both of these inter-actions has long been sought
after as an attractive strategy to fully restore p53-dependent tumor suppressor activity in
cancers with wild-type p53. Selective targeting of this pathway has thus far been limited to
MDM2-only small-molecule inhibitors, which lack affinity for MDMX. We demonstrate that dual
MDMX/MDM2 inhibition with a stapled a-helical peptide (ALRN-6924), which has recently entered
phase I clinical testing, produces marked antileukemic effects. ALRN-6924 robustly activates
p53-dependent transcription at the single-cell and single-molecule levels and exhibits
biochemical and molecular biological on-target activity in leukemia cells in vitro and in vivo.
Dual MDMX/MDM2 inhibition by ALRN-6924 inhibits cellular proliferation by inducing cell cycle
arrest and apoptosis in cell lines and primary AML patient cells, including leukemic stem
cell-enriched populations, and disrupts functional clonogenic and serial replating capacity.
Furthermore, ALRN-6924 markedly improves survival in AML xenograft models. Our study provides
mechanistic insight to support further testing of ALRN-6924 as a therapeutic approach in AML
and other cancers with wild-type p53.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.