AI Article Synopsis

  • EGFR is a key target in cancer treatment, with strategies including small molecule TKIs like erlotinib and monoclonal antibodies like cetuximab and trastuzumab, showing effectiveness in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
  • The study examined combining erlotinib with cetuximab or trastuzumab in EGFR wild-type NSCLC cell lines, finding that erlotinib increased EGFR/HER2 expression, enhancing susceptibility to NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity without significantly affecting cell proliferation.
  • Results showed that combining erlotinib with monoclonal antibodies could significantly inhibit tumor growth in xenograft models, suggesting a promising strategy for treating NSCLC patients sensitive to erlotinib.

Article Abstract

Background: The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is an established target for anti-cancer treatment in different tumour types. Two different strategies have been explored to inhibit this pivotal molecule in epithelial cancer development: small molecules TKIs and monoclonal antibodies. ErbB/HER-targeting by monoclonal antibodies such as cetuximab and trastuzumab or tyrosine-kinase inhibitors as gefitinib or erlotinib has been proven effective in the treatment of advanced NSCLC.

Results: In this study we explored the potential of combining either erlotinib with cetuximab or trastuzumab to improve the efficacy of EGFR targeted therapy in EGFR wild-type NSCLC cell lines. Erlotinib treatment was observed to increase EGFR and/or HER2 expression at the plasma membrane level only in NSCLC cell lines sensitive to the drug inducing protein stabilization. The combined treatment had marginal effect on cell proliferation but markedly increased antibody-dependent, NK mediated, cytotoxicity in vitro. Moreover, in the Calu-3 xenograft model, the combination significantly inhibited tumour growth when compared with erlotinib and cetuximab alone.

Conclusion: Our results indicate that erlotinib increases surface expression of EGFR and/or HER2 only in EGFR-TKI sensitive NSCLC cell lines and, in turns, leads to increased susceptibility to ADCC both in vitro and in a xenograft models. The combination of erlotinib with monoclonal antibodies represents a potential strategy to improve the treatment of wild-type EGFR NSCLC patients sensitive to erlotinib.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3577499PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-11-91DOI Listing

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