Abstract

DNA damage repair deficiency leads to the increased risk of genome instability and oncogenic transformation. In the meanwhile, this deficiency could be exploited for cancer treatment by inducing excessive genome instability and catastrophic DNA damage. Continuous DNA replication in cancer cells leads to higher demand of DNA repair components. Due to the oncogenic loss of some DNA repair effectors (e.g. BRCA) and incomplete DNA repair repertoire, some cancer cells are addicted to certain DNA repair pathways such as Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP)-related single-strand break repair pathway. The interaction between BRCA and PARP is a form of synthetic lethal effect which means the simultaneously functional loss of two genes lead to cell death, while defect in any single gene has a slight effect on cell viability. Based on synthetic lethal theory, Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor (PARPi) was developed aiming to selectively target cancer cells harboring BRCA1/2 mutations. Recently, a growing body of evidence indicated that a broader population of patients could benefit from PARPi therapy far beyond those with germline BRCA1/2 mutated tumors. Numerous biomarkers including homologous recombination deficiency and high level of replication pressure also herald high sensitivity to PARPi treatment. Besides, a series of studies indicated that PARPi-involved combination therapy such as PARPi with additional chemotherapy therapy, immune checkpoint inhibitor, as well as targeted agent had a great advantage in overcoming PARPi resistance and enhancing PARPi efficacy. In this review, we summarized the advances of PARPi in clinical application. Besides, we highlighted multiple promising PARPi-based combination strategies in preclinical and clinical studies.

Highlights

  • As the hallmark of cancers, genome instability participates in the initiation and progression of cancers by inducing the generation of mutations and neoantigens [1–4]

  • The results showed that the toxicity of combination therapy was acceptable and the efficacy of combination therapy was satisfactory especially in DNA damage repair deficient patients [95]

  • Synthetic lethal interaction is context-dependent where the alteration in first gene leads to the essential role of second gene for the viability of cancer cells

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Summary

Introduction

As the hallmark of cancers, genome instability participates in the initiation and progression of cancers by inducing the generation of mutations and neoantigens [1–4]. The data of NCT01874353 supported the approval of Olaparib tablet for the maintenance treatment of gBRCAm or somatic BRCA-mutated (sBRCAm) recurrent epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer patients [42]. In 2019, the results of a phase 3 trial (POLO study) showed that maintenance Olaparib treatment effectively prolonged the survival time of gBRCAm metastatic prostate cancer patients [45].

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