Literature DB >> 19010843

Nonclinical antiangiogenesis and antitumor activities of axitinib (AG-013736), an oral, potent, and selective inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor tyrosine kinases 1, 2, 3.

Dana D Hu-Lowe1, Helen Y Zou, Maren L Grazzini, Max E Hallin, Grant R Wickman, Karin Amundson, Jeffrey H Chen, David A Rewolinski, Shinji Yamazaki, Ellen Y Wu, Michele A McTigue, Brion W Murray, Robert S Kania, Patrick O'Connor, David R Shalinsky, Steve L Bender.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Axitinib (AG-013736) is a potent and selective inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor tyrosine kinases 1 to 3 that is in clinical development for the treatment of solid tumors. We provide a comprehensive description of its in vitro characteristics and activities, in vivo antiangiogenesis, and antitumor efficacy and translational pharmacology data. EXPERIMENTAL
DESIGN: The potency, kinase selectivity, pharmacologic activity, and antitumor efficacy of axitinib were assessed in various nonclinical models.
RESULTS: Axitinib inhibits cellular autophosphorylation of VEGF receptors (VEGFR) with picomolar IC(50) values. Counterscreening across multiple kinase and protein panels shows it is selective for VEGFRs. Axitinib blocks VEGF-mediated endothelial cell survival, tube formation, and downstream signaling through endothelial nitric oxide synthase, Akt and extracellular signal-regulated kinase. Following twice daily oral administration, axitinib produces consistent and dose-dependent antitumor efficacy that is associated with blocking VEGFR-2 phosphorylation, vascular permeability, angiogenesis, and concomitant induction of tumor cell apoptosis. Axitinib in combination with chemotherapeutic or targeted agents enhances antitumor efficacy in many tumor models compared with single agent alone. Dose scheduling studies in a human pancreatic tumor xenograft model show that simultaneous administration of axitinib and gemcitabine without prolonged dose interruption or truncation of axitinib produces the greatest antitumor efficacy. The efficacious drug concentrations predicted in nonclinical studies are consistent with the range achieved in the clinic. Although axitinib inhibits platelet-derived growth factor receptors and KIT with nanomolar in vitro potencies, based on pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic analysis, axitinib acts primarily as a VEGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor at the current clinical exposure.
CONCLUSIONS: The selectivity, potency for VEGFRs, and robust nonclinical activity may afford broad opportunities for axitinib to improve cancer therapy.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19010843     DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-08-0652

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Cancer Res        ISSN: 1078-0432            Impact factor:   12.531


  200 in total

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Review 3.  Axitinib plasma pharmacokinetics and ethnic differences.

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4.  A multicenter, prospective phase II trial of gemcitabine plus axitinib in patients with renal cell carcinoma with a predominant sarcomatoid component.

Authors:  Inkeun Park; Hyo Jin Lee; Woo Kyoon Bae; Shinkyo Yoon; Jae Lyun Lee
Journal:  Invest New Drugs       Date:  2019-06-24       Impact factor: 3.850

Review 5.  Adverse effects of anticancer agents that target the VEGF pathway.

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6.  Phase 2 Multicenter Single-Arm Study of Second-Line Axitinib in Favorable Risk Patients with Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma: FavorAx.

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Authors:  Jie Ma; David J Waxman
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8.  Combined treatment of pancreatic cancer with mithramycin A and tolfenamic acid promotes Sp1 degradation and synergistic antitumor activity.

Authors:  Zhiliang Jia; Yong Gao; Liwei Wang; Qiang Li; Jun Zhang; Xiangdong Le; Daoyan Wei; James C Yao; David Z Chang; Suyun Huang; Keping Xie
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9.  Axitinib alone or in combination with chemotherapeutic drugs exerts potent antitumor activity against human gastric cancer cells in vitro and in vivo.

Authors:  Qiong He; Jing Gao; Sai Ge; Tingting Wang; Yanyan Li; Zhi Peng; Yilin Li; Lin Shen
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Review 10.  Incidence and risk of hypertension with a novel multi-targeted kinase inhibitor axitinib in cancer patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

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