Poly(ADP-Ribose) Polymerase Inhibition: "Targeted" Therapy for Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

Abstract

In contrast to endocrine-sensitive and HER2-positive breast cancer, novel agents capable of treating advanced triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) are lacking. PARP (Poly-(adenosine diphosphate [ADP]-ribose) polymerase) inhibitors are emerging as one of the most promising ‘targeted’ therapeutics to treat TNBC, with the intended ‘target’ being DNA repair. PARP's are a family of enzymes involved in multiple cellular processes including DNA repair. TNBC shares multiple clinico-pathologic features with BRCA-mutated breast cancers which harbor dysfunctional DNA repair mechanisms. Investigators hypothesized PARP inhibition, in conjunction with the loss of DNA-repair via BRCA-dependent mechanisms, would result in synthetic lethality and augmented cell death. This hypothesis has borne out in both preclinical models and in clinical trials testing PARP inhibitors in both BRCA-deficient and TNBC. The focus of this review will include an overview of the preclinical rationale for evaluating PARP inhibitors in TNBC, the presumed mechanism of action of this novel therapeutic class, promising results from several influential clinical trials of PARP inhibition in advanced breast cancer (both TNBC and BRCA-deficient), proposed mechanisms of acquired resistance to PARP inhibitors, and, finally, conclude with current challenges and future directions for the development of PARP inhibitors in the treatment of breast cancer

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