Literature DB >> 24101146

Preclinical pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic/efficacy relationships for alisertib, an investigational small-molecule inhibitor of Aurora A kinase.

Santhosh Palani1, Mayankbhai Patel, Jessica Huck, Mengkun Zhang, Suresh K Balani, Johnny Yang, Susan Chen, Jerome Mettetal, Mark Manfredi, Wen Chyi Shyu, Jeffrey A Ecsedy, Arijit Chakravarty.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Alisertib (MLN8237) is an investigational inhibitor of Aurora A kinase (AAK). Aurora A plays an essential role in the regulation of spindle assembly and chromosome alignment during mitosis. Inhibition of Aurora A by alisertib in tissue culture has previously been demonstrated to lead to improper chromosomal alignment and disruption of spindle organization, resulting in a transient mitotic delay. The spindle organization defects induced by alisertib have been used to develop a pharmacodynamic (PD) assay for Aurora A inhibition based on the percentage of mitotic cells with proper chromosomal alignment at the metaphase plate (% aligned spindles, abbreviated as AS). The transient mitotic delay that occurs with AAK inhibition permits the use of the mitotic index (the fraction of cells in the population currently undergoing mitosis, abbreviated as MI) as an additional PD assay. When the two PD assays were used in Phase I clinical trials, the reduction in AS was strongly correlated with dose levels and exposures in patients from single time point PD measurements; however, MI failed to show any correlation. To further understand this clinical finding, we constructed PK/PD/efficacy models for AS and MI that can precisely capture the temporal dynamics of the PD markers from in vivo xenograft studies.
METHODS: A PK/PD study was conducted using a single oral dose of alisertib at 3, 10, and 20 mg/kg in HCT-116 xenografts implanted subcutaneously in mice. An extravascular, two-compartmental pharmacokinetic (PK) model was used to describe the drug kinetics. Consistent with the mechanistic hypothesis for AAK inhibition, the PD biomarkers such as AS and MI were fitted to PK using a direct response inhibitory sigmoid model and an indirect response turnover model, respectively. The antitumor activity of alisertib dosed orally for 21 days with different dose levels and schedules was evaluated.
RESULTS: The PK/PD models showed a fast, sustained response for AS after alisertib administration, whereas MI exhibited a slow, transient response. The PK/efficacy relationship for alisertib in HCT-116 xenografts closely corresponds to the PK/PD relationship for the PD markers, with all three IC50s in close agreement (303, 270, and 280 nM, respectively).
CONCLUSION: The PK/PD and PK/efficacy models show that both AS and MI are equally relevant as mechanism-based PD markers to capture drug activity. However, of the two PD markers, the fast, sustained response of AS makes it the only clinically viable PD marker for defining a dose-response relationship, as its maximal effect can be captured from a wider time window with a single PD sampling; while the window to capture dose-related MI response is narrower.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24101146     DOI: 10.1007/s00280-013-2305-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Chemother Pharmacol        ISSN: 0344-5704            Impact factor:   3.333


  6 in total

1.  Aurora A Kinase Inhibition Selectively Synergizes with Histone Deacetylase Inhibitor through Cytokinesis Failure in T-cell Lymphoma.

Authors:  Kelly M Zullo; Yige Guo; Laurence Cooke; Xavier Jirau-Serrano; Michael Mangone; Luigi Scotto; Jennifer E Amengual; Yinghui Mao; Renu Nandakumar; Serge Cremers; Jimmy Duong; Daruka Mahadevan; Owen A O'Connor
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2015-04-15       Impact factor: 12.531

2.  Phase II Intergroup Trial of Alisertib in Relapsed and Refractory Peripheral T-Cell Lymphoma and Transformed Mycosis Fungoides: SWOG 1108.

Authors:  Paul M Barr; Hongli Li; Catherine Spier; Daruka Mahadevan; Michael LeBlanc; Mansoor Ul Haq; Bryan D Huber; Christopher R Flowers; Nina D Wagner-Johnston; Steven M Horwitz; Richard I Fisher; Bruce D Cheson; Sonali M Smith; Brad S Kahl; Nancy L Bartlett; Jonathan W Friedberg
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2015-06-15       Impact factor: 44.544

3.  A simple and rapid UHPLC-MS/MS method for the quantitation of the dual aurora kinase A/B inhibitor SCH-1473759 in murine plasma.

Authors:  Marco A Ferraz Nogueira Filho; Cody J Peer; Jeffers Nguyen; Amy McCalla; Lee Helman; William D Figg
Journal:  J Pharm Biomed Anal       Date:  2016-10-05       Impact factor: 3.935

4.  Combining an Aurora Kinase Inhibitor and a Death Receptor Ligand/Agonist Antibody Triggers Apoptosis in Melanoma Cells and Prevents Tumor Growth in Preclinical Mouse Models.

Authors:  Yan Liu; Oriana E Hawkins; Anna E Vilgelm; Jeffrey S Pawlikowski; Jeffrey A Ecsedy; Jeffrey A Sosman; Mark C Kelley; Ann Richmond
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2015-07-07       Impact factor: 12.531

5.  Inhibition of the Aurora A kinase augments the anti-tumor efficacy of oncolytic measles virotherapy.

Authors:  I D Iankov; C B Kurokawa; A B D'Assoro; J N Ingle; E Domingo-Musibay; C Allen; C M Crosby; A A Nair; M C Liu; I Aderca; M J Federspiel; E Galanis
Journal:  Cancer Gene Ther       Date:  2015-08-14       Impact factor: 5.987

Review 6.  Quantitative translational modeling to facilitate preclinical to clinical efficacy & toxicity translation in oncology.

Authors:  Andy Zx Zhu
Journal:  Future Sci OA       Date:  2018-04-23
  6 in total

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