Combinations of surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy can eradicate tumors in patients with locally advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (LA SCCHN), but a significant proportion of tumors progress, recur, or do not respond to therapy due to treatment resistance. The prognosis for these patients is poor, thus new approaches are needed to improve outcomes. Key resistance mechanisms to chemoradiotherapy (CRT) in patients with LA SCCHN are alterations to the pathways that mediate apoptosis, a form of programmed cell death. Targeting dysregulation of apoptotic pathways represents a rational therapeutic strategy in many types of cancer, with a number of proteins, including the pro-survival B-cell lymphoma 2 family and inhibitors of apoptosis proteins (IAPs), having been identified as druggable targets. This review discusses the mechanisms by which apoptosis occurs under physiological conditions, and how this process is abnormally restrained in LA SCCHN tumor cells, with treatment strategies aimed at re-enabling apoptosis in LA SCCHN also considered. In particular, the development of, and future opportunities for, IAP inhibitors in LA SCCHN are discussed, in light of recent encouraging proof-of-concept clinical trial data.
Keyphrases
- locally advanced
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell cycle arrest
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- rectal cancer
- clinical trial
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- radiation therapy
- phase ii study
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- minimally invasive
- ejection fraction
- type diabetes
- chronic kidney disease
- metabolic syndrome
- stem cells
- lymph node metastasis
- left ventricular
- signaling pathway
- atrial fibrillation
- cell proliferation
- study protocol
- anti inflammatory
- bone marrow
- young adults
- big data
- cancer therapy
- weight loss
- cell therapy
- machine learning
- double blind
- artificial intelligence