New Pathway Emerges as A Favorable Target in CRC

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Wnt emerges as an exciting and favorable pathway for the treatment of patients with CRC.

Wnt could be a prime target and immune agonist in colorectal cancer (CRC), given that the protein is present in the majority of patients with the disease. However, investigators are still in the early stages of identifying and developing compounds capable of targeting mutations that activate the pathway, said Lukas E. Dow, PhD.

“The goal is to understand what we can do to [increase responses to] immunotherapy. One potential option is targeting the Wnt pathway,” said Dow. “Good preclinical evidence [in liver cancer and melanoma] suggest that suppressing Wnt in tumor cells allows T cells and other components of the immune system to target tumor cells more effectively.”

In an interview with OncLive®, a sister publication to Oncology Nursing News®, Dow, an assistant professor of biochemistry and medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine, highlighted ongoing research evaluating Wnt as a potential target in CRC.

OncLiveÒ: Could you discuss the potential applications of targeting the Wnt pathway in CRC?

Dow: The Wnt pathway is activated or mutated in more than 95% of CRC cases. I discussed potential ways to target it. At the moment, there is no clinical compound that has received FDA approval. We're operating on preclinical models to understand where [Wnt-targeted therapies] would be effective and what we can do to make it more effective. 

Could you expand on some of the combinations that are being evaluated?

There is a phase I trial that's no longer recruiting and is evaluating a porcupine inhibitor, which blocks Wnt ligand release from cells. The inhibitor was tested in CRC that have R-spondin fusions because they rely on the Wnt ligand, as do BRAF mutations. Therefore, they were combined with BRAF inhibitors as well as an EGFR inhibitor to try to block MAPK activation.

There are two other trials that are actively recruiting and are examining similar porcupine inhibitors. However, these are early-phase, dose-escalation trials that are being conducted to look at safety. Once safety is established, it is likely that these compounds will be combined with existing therapies that we know target relevant pathways.

Could you highlight the impact of immunotherapy in this space?

In general, immunotherapy is great. However, its use in CRC is pretty limited. There are FDA-approved immunotherapies for patients with microsatellite instability-high or hypermutated CRC. In general, these therapies show relatively good responses. However, for 95% of patients with microsatellite stable disease, immunotherapy has a very poor response rate.

What is the key takeaway from this work?

We have reason to be hopeful about strategies targeting the Wnt pathway, but we need to pay close attention to the types of mutations that activate this pathway as well as other cancer-associated mutations that occur in those cells, as they could impact the way the cell responds to Wnt suppression.

A version of this article originally appeared on OncLive® as, “Wnt Pathway Emerges as Attractive Target in CRC”.

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