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Current Cancer Drug Targets

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1568-0096
ISSN (Online): 1873-5576

Targeting the STAT Pathway in Head and Neck Cancer: Recent Advances and Future Prospects

Author(s): N. G. Nikitakis, H. Siavash and J. J. Sauk

Volume 4, Issue 8, 2004

Page: [637 - 651] Pages: 15

DOI: 10.2174/1568009043332736

Price: $65

Abstract

Head and neck cancer, the sixth most common type of cancer worldwide, is associated with a dismal prognosis that has minimally improved during the last few decades. Future advances in the treatment and prognosis of this fatal disease largely rely upon a better understanding of the molecular events that underlie tumor development and progression, allowing specific targeting of the involved molecules and pathways. In this context, recent efforts have revolved around a family of transcription factors known as STATs (signal transducers and activators of transcription). STAT proteins comprise a family of latent cytoplasmic transcription factors that become transiently activated in response to extracellular signals, leading to regulation of diverse physiological responses. There is compelling evidence that persistent activation of specific STAT molecules, especially Stat3 and Stat5, possesses oncogenic properties in a number of human cancers, including head and neck cancer. The presence of constitutively activated STAT molecules in cancer cells is mainly attributed to the dysregulation of upstream activating pathways and the aberration of negative regulatory mechanisms. The end result is induction of specific target genes that stimulate cell proliferation, prevent apoptosis, promote angiogenesis and facilitate tumor immune evasion. Therefore, targeting and disruption of oncogenic STAT signaling may theoretically be accomplished through various approaches, involving direct (e.g. interference with the various facets of STAT expression, activation or function) and indirect strategies (e.g. inhibition of upstream signaling events and enhancement or restoration of negative regulatory mechanisms). The availability of multiple potential targets for interruption of aberrant STAT signaling in cancer and the thus-far promising results have generated optimism for the clinical applicability of STAT targeting in head and neck cancer, which is the focus of this review.

Keywords: signal transducer and activator of transcription, head and neck, squamous cell carcinoma, targeting therapies for cancer


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