A review of targeted therapies evaluated by the pediatric preclinical testing program for osteosarcoma.

Bibliographic Details
Title: A review of targeted therapies evaluated by the pediatric preclinical testing program for osteosarcoma.
Authors: Sampson, Valerie B., Gorlick, Richard, Kamara, Davida, Anders Kolb, E.
Source: Frontiers in Oncology; May2013, Vol. 3, p1-12, 12p
Subject Terms: OSTEOSARCOMA in children, DISEASE progression, BONE cancer, CANCER chemotherapy, MONOCLONAL antibody probes, CLINICAL trials, LYMPHOBLASTIC leukemia in children, THERAPEUTICS, LEUKEMIA treatment
Abstract: Osteosarcoma, the most common malignant bone tumor of childhood, is a high-grade primary bone sarcoma that occurs mostly in adolescence. Standard treatment consists of surgery in combination with multi-agent chemotherapy regimens. The development and approval of imatinib for Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia in children and the fully human monoclonal antibody, anti-GD2, as part of an immune therapy for high-risk neuroblastoma patients have established the precedent for use of targeted inhibitors along with standard chemotherapy backbones. However, few targeted agents tested have achieved traditional clinical endpoints for osteosarcoma. Many biological agents demonstrating anti-tumor responses in preclinical and early-phase clinical testing have failed to reach response thresholds to justify randomized trials with large numbers of patients. The development of targeted therapies for pediatric cancer remains a significant challenge. To aid in the prioritization of new agents for clinical testing, the Pediatric Preclinical Testing Program (PPTP) has developed reliable and robust preclinical pediatric cancer models to rapidly screen agents for activity in multiple childhood cancers and establish pharmacological parameters and effective drug concentrations for clinical trials. In this article, we examine a range of standard and novel agents that have been evaluated by the PPTP, and we discuss the preclinical and clinical development of these for the treatment of osteosarcoma. We further demonstrate that committed resources for hypothesis-driven drug discovery and development are needed to yield clinical successes in the search for new therapies for this pediatric disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Complementary Index
More Details
ISSN:2234943X
DOI:10.3389/fonc.2013.00132
Published in:Frontiers in Oncology
Language:English