Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Dec 2020)

Targeted therapies for RET-fusion cancer: Dilemmas and breakthrough

  • SiJie Ding,
  • Rong Wang,
  • ShunLi Peng,
  • Xiaoqing Luo,
  • LongHui Zhong,
  • Hong Yang,
  • YueYun Ma,
  • ShiYu Chen,
  • Wei Wang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 132
p. 110901

Abstract

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Genomic profiling has revolutionized treatment options for patients with oncogene-driven cancers, such as epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutant carcinoma. Rearranged during transfection (RET) rearrangement, as one of the main activated oncogenes, has been well studied and found to be involved in the malignant behavior of carcinogenesis, resulting in acquired resistance to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors and inducing an intrinsic resistance to immunotherapy. Thus, targeted therapies have been investigated against RET arrangement cancers, including several multi-kinase inhibitors and selective RET inhibitors. However, modest efficacy, a relatively high rate of toxicity, and poor effectiveness against brain metastasis are common limitations of multi-targeted novel molecular inhibitors. A promising prospect was shown recently in selective RET inhibitors in several ongoing clinical trials. In this review, we reviewed the concurrent dilemmas of targeted therapies against RET arrangement cancer from preclinical and clinical studies and proposed several clinical considerations for clinical practice prospectively.

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