Literature DB >> 25127392

A phase 2 study of MK-0457 in patients with BCR-ABL T315I mutant chronic myelogenous leukemia and philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

J F Seymour1, D W Kim2, E Rubin3, A Haregewoin3, J Clark3, P Watson3, T Hughes4, I Dufva5, J L Jimenez6, F-X Mahon7, P Rousselot8, J Cortes9, G Martinelli10, C Papayannidis10, A Nagler11, F J Giles12.   

Abstract

Aurora kinase overexpression has been observed in patients with hematologic malignancies. MK-0457, a pan-aurora kinase inhibitor that also inhibits the ABL T315I mutant, was evaluated to treat patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) or Philadelphia chromosome (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) with the T315I mutation. Adults with Ph+ chronic phase (CP)-, accelerated phase (AP)- or blast phase (BP)-CML, or ALL and documented BCR-ABL T315I mutation were treated with a 5-day continuous infusion of MK-0457 administered every 14 days at 40 mg/m(2)/h, 32 mg/m(2)/h or 24 mg/m(2)/h. Fifty-two patients (CP, n=15; AP, n=14; BP, n=11; Ph+ ALL, n=12) were treated. Overall, 8% of patients achieved major cytogenetic response; 6% achieved unconfirmed complete or partial response; 39% had no response. Two patients (CP CML) achieved complete hematologic response. No patients with advanced CML or Ph+ ALL achieved major hematologic response. The most common adverse event (AE) was neutropenia (50%). The most common grade 3/4 AEs were neutropenia (46%) and febrile neutropenia (35%). MK-0457 demonstrated minimal efficacy and only at higher, intolerable doses; lower doses were tolerated and no unexpected toxicities were observed. These data will assist in the development of future aurora kinase inhibitors and in the selection of appropriate target patient populations.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25127392      PMCID: PMC4219463          DOI: 10.1038/bcj.2014.60

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood Cancer J        ISSN: 2044-5385            Impact factor:   11.037


Introduction

Significant progress has been made in the treatment of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML); however, patients who progress from chronic phase (CP) CML to advanced disease respond poorly to therapy and have inadequate survival.[1] Critical to the pathogenesis of CML and a subset of Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ ALL) is a chromosomal rearrangement that results in a fusion gene, BCR-ABL, which encodes an unregulated cytoplasm-targeted tyrosine kinase.[2] Although first- and second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitors—such as imatinib, dasatinib and nilotinib—have been used successfully to treat both CP and advanced CML, intolerance or resistance to these compounds presents a major challenge to treatment and the most common cause of treatment failure.[3] For instance, median survival of patients with blast phase (BP) CML who are refractory or intolerant to imatinib is 3 to 9 months.[4,5] Of particular concern is the ABL T315I ‘gatekeeper' mutation, which renders leukemia cells resistant to all commercially available tyrosine kinase inhibitors other than ponatinib.[3,6] Aurora kinases (aurora-A, -B, -C) are serine/threonine protein kinases involved in the regulation of processes crucial for mitosis. Deregulation of aurora kinase activity promotes aberrant mitosis and chromosome instability. Overexpression of aurora kinases has been linked to tumorigenesis in a number of human cancers, including solid tumors and hematologic malignancies.[7] A high proportion of patients with hematologic malignancies—including acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), Ph+ leukemias, aggressive non-Hodgkin lymphoma and Hodgkin lymphoma—overexpress aurora-A and -B; in some cases, overexpression has been linked to poorer outcomes.[8] MK-0457 is a potent, small-molecule pan-aurora kinase inhibitor (binding affinity [Ki]=~0.6–18 nM) that disrupts mitotic progression and induces apoptosis. MK-0457 also inhibits the activity of other kinases, including FLT3 (Ki=~30 nM), JAK-2 (Ki=~190 nM) and both wild type (Ki ~30 nM) and T315I-mutated ABL (Ki ~42 nM).[9, 10, 11] MK-0457 has been investigated for the treatment of both hematologic malignancies and solid tumors.[4,11, 12, 13] The ability to inhibit multiple kinases, including the imatinib-resistant ABL T315I mutant, may be advantageous in the treatment of newly diagnosed and advanced disease. In a phase 1/2 dose-escalation study in patients with refractory hematologic malignancies, treatment with MK-0457 was generally well tolerated.[4] Forty-four percent of CML patients with the BCR-ABL T315I mutation achieved a response, and responses were reported as durable.[4] The current phase 2 study was conducted to further evaluate MK-0457 in patients with CML or Ph+ ALL carrying the T315I mutation.

Materials and Methods

Study design and patient eligibility

This was a multicenter, open-label, nonrandomized, phase 2 study that evaluated the safety and efficacy of MK-0457 in patients with either CML or Ph+ ALL and confirmed BCR-ABL T315I mutation (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00405054; http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/ NCT00405054; Protocol 008). Bone marrow aspirate and blood for molecular analysis were collected at screening and analyzed locally to detect the BCR-ABL T315I mutation. Bone marrow aspiration and/or biopsy was conducted before every other cycle for the first 3 months and then every 3 months, at the time of discontinuation and every 3 months during follow-up, and/or as clinically indicated or to confirm a response. Locally available assays were used for detection of the T315I mutation (examples included direct sequencing, fluorescence resonance energy transfer hybridization probe detection and denaturing high performance liquid chromatography). Patients 18 years of age or older with Ph+ (or BCR-ABL+) CP CML, BP CML, accelerated phase (AP) CML or ALL were eligible. The Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status had to be 2 or lower for CP CML patients and 3 or lower for all other patients. There were no restrictions on the number of prior therapies; however, administration of cytotoxic agents was not permitted within 2 weeks prior to study drug treatment, and a period of at least five half-lives was required for non-cytotoxic anti-leukemic agents. Hydroxyurea was permitted through the first treatment cycle to control peripheral blood leukemic cell counts. Patients must have had adequate liver and renal function (with the exception of Gilbert's syndrome affecting total bilirubin) and were excluded if they had uncontrolled symptomatic congestive heart failure, angina or a myocardial infarction in the preceding 3 months; active infections including HIV, HBV and HCV; severe concurrent disease; or an active second malignancy, or if they had undergone an allogeneic bone marrow transplant within 3 months of starting the trial or had active uncontrolled graft-versus-host disease. Patients with known hypersensitivity to components of the study drug or analogs, or who were pregnant or breastfeeding, were also excluded. The study was conducted in accordance with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki and followed Good Clinical Practice guidelines. All documents were reviewed and approved by the individual institution review boards and all patients provided written informed consent prior to trial enrollment.

Treatment plan and assessments

Patients were treated using a 5-day continuous intravenous infusion of MK-0457 administered every 14 days, which constituted one cycle of treatment. The maximum tolerated dose was initially identified as 40 mg/m2/h for the 5-day dosing schedule of MK-0457. The protocol was subsequently amended to include a lower starting dose of MK-0457 (32 mg/m2/h) because of significant toxicity at 40 mg/m2/h. Additional patients were enrolled at a lower dose of 24 mg/m2/h, with further dose reductions permitted in patients for toxicity. Patients who were candidates for bone marrow transplant were permitted to leave the study for transplantation. Those patients who achieved a hematologic response prior to bone marrow transplantation were followed for disease outcomes. Patients were allowed to receive additional treatment cycles as long as they did not display clinically significant disease progression and continued to tolerate the study drug. Primary efficacy end points were major cytogenetic response (MCyR) for patients with CP CML and major hematologic response for patients with AP CML, BP CML and Ph+ ALL.[14] Key secondary efficacy end points were complete hematologic response in patients with CP CML and best cytogenetic response in patients with AP CML, BP CML and Ph+ ALL. Hematologic and cytogenetic responses were evaluated throughout the study from peripheral blood, bone marrow and lumbar puncture (for patients who were central nervous system positive). Hematologic response was required to be maintained for at least 28 days to be classified as a response. All patients were assessed for safety, which included physical examination, vital signs, chest X-rays, ECOG performance status, laboratory assessments and monitoring of adverse events (AEs). Adverse events were graded according to the United States National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 3.0. Each of the four populations was considered an independent substudy. A Simon two-stage minimax design was used with a one-sided type 1 error of 0.025 and type 2 error of 0.10 using early stopping rules to terminate the substudy if the primary end point was unlikely to be met. A more conservative stopping rule was employed for the CP, BP and AP CML populations if none of the first 22 patients responded to treatment. The rate of response (MCyR for CP CML; major hematologic response for AP CML, BP CML and Ph+ ALL) in each population to declare the substudy positive with 90% power was 30% in BP, 30% in Ph+ ALL, 45% in AP and 35% in CP.

Results

Patient characteristics and disposition

Between December 2006 and May 2008, 52 patients with T315I-positive CML or Ph+ ALL were enrolled and received at least one dose of study drug (Table 1). Recruitment was halted prior to completion of the planned accrual target of 228 patients because of sponsor decision to discontinue the program due to change in priorities. Enrolled patients included 15 with CP CML, 14 with AP CML, 12 with Ph+ ALL and 11 with BP CML. The overall median age was 52 years (range 22–78) and the majority of patients (92%) had an ECOG performance status of 0 to 2. Fifty-four percent of patients had received at least four prior therapies and 29% had received one to three prior therapies, although therapies received may have been part of the same regimen. Seventeen percent were previously untreated. Twenty-six patients started treatment at 40 mg/m2/h, 11 at 32 mg/m2/h and 15 at 24 mg/m2/h. Eighteen patients (35%) discontinued treatment due to progressive disease, representing half of all patients who discontinued the study. Ten patients (19%) discontinued due to AEs. Other reasons for discontinuation included bone marrow transplant (6%), physician decision (6%) and patient consent withdrawn (6%).
Table 1

Patient demographics, baseline characteristics and disposition

Baseline characteristicsMK-0457 dose level
All patients n=52
 24 mg/m2/h n=1532 mg/m2/h n=1140 mg/m2/h n=26 
Gender, n (%)
 Male9 (60)7 (64)18 (69)34 (65)
 Female6 (40)4 (36)8 (31)18 (35)
     
Age, years
 Median (range)63.0 (30, 74)53.0 (36, 69)49.5 (22, 78)52.0 (22, 78)
 Race, n (%)    
 Asian0 (0)2 (18)12 (46)14 (27)
 Black/African-American3 (20)0 (0)0 (0)3 (6)
 White12 (80)9 (82)14 (54)35 (67)
     
ECOG performance status, n (%)
 05 (33)3 (27)11 (42)19 (37)
 14 (27)5 (46)10 (39)19 (37)
 24 (27)2 (18)4 (15)10 (19)
 32 (13)1 (9)1 (4)4 (8)
 40 (0)0 (0)0 (0)0 (0)
     
Cancer stage, n (%)
 Chronic phase CML3 (20)3 (27)9 (35)15 (29)
 Accelerated phase CML7 (47)1 (9)6 (23)14 (27)
 Blast phase CML1 (7)5 (46)5 (19)11 (21)
 Ph+ ALL4 (26)2 (18)6 (23)12 (23)
     
Number of prior therapies, n (%)a
 03 (20)2 (18)4 (15)9 (17)
 11 (7)1 (9)2 (8)4 (8)
 23 (20)1 (9)2 (8)6 (12)
 32 (13)1 (9)2 (8)5 (10)
 4 or more6 (40)6 (55)16 (62)28 (54)
Patients who completed the study, n (%)3 (20)5 (46)7 (27)15 (29)
Patients who discontinued the study, n (%)12 (80)6 (55)19 (73)37 (71)
 Adverse event5 (33)0 (0)5 (19)10 (19)
 Bone marrow transplant1 (7)1 (9)1 (4)3 (6)
 Physician's decision2 (13)0 (0)1 (4)3 (6)
 Progressive disease3 (20)5 (46)10 (39)18 (35)
 Withdrew consent1 (7)0 (0)2 (8)3 (6)

Abbreviations: CML, chronic myelogenous leukemia; ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; Ph+ ALL, Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Prior therapies could be part of the same regimen.

Efficacy

Cytogenetic response was not measureable for almost half (48%) of all patients due to lack of a post-baseline assessment. For evaluable patients, 8% of patients (n=4) achieved a confirmed MCyR, 6% (n=3) achieved an unconfirmed complete cytogenetic response (CCyR) or partial cytogenetic response (PCyR) and 39% had no response (Table 2). Two patients with CP CML (13% of CP patients) experienced a MCyR: one with CCyR and one with PCyR (Table 2). Both patients were in the 40-mg/m2/h treatment group; however, both required significant dose reductions throughout the course of the study. Dose reduction for the patient who achieved a CCyR occurred each cycle until dose stabilization at 16 mg/m2/h at cycle 6. The patient with a PCyR had a dose reduction to 32 mg/m2/h at cycle 2 followed by another dose reduction at cycle 6 to 28 mg/m2/h. Two of 25 patients (8%) with advanced CML achieved a MCyR, one with AP CML achieved a CCyR and one with BP CML achieved a PCyR. Three patients with AP CML or Ph+ ALL (6% of all patients), all in the 40-mg/m2/h treatment group, achieved an unconfirmed CCyR or PCyR. Two of 15 patients (13%) with CP CML achieved a complete hematologic response. Both were in the 40-mg/m2/h treatment group and none of the other patients, including those in lower treatment groups, had confirmed hematologic assessments of response post baseline. None of the 37 patients with AP CML or Ph+ ALL achieved a major hematologic response while in the study. Four patients with AP CML achieved a minor response: three patients in the 40-mg/m2/h treatment group and one in the 32-mg/m2/h treatment group. One patient with Ph+ ALL achieved unconfirmed no evidence of leukemia (24 mg/m2/h) and one patient achieved a minor response (40 mg/m2/h). None of the 11 patients with BP CML achieved any major or minor response.
Table 2

Summary of best cytogenetic and hematologic responses for patients treated with any dose of MK-0457

Best response, n (%)Chronic phase CML n=15Accelerated phase CML n=14Blast phase CML n=11Ph+ ALL n=12All patients n=52
Best cytogenetic response
 Major response2 (13.3)1 (7.1)1 (9.1)0 (0.0)4 (7.7)
 Complete response1 (6.7)a1 (7.1)b0 (0.0)0 (0.0)2 (3.8)
 Partial response1 (6.7)a0 (0.0)1 (9.1)c0 (0.0)2 (3.8)
 Unconfirmed complete response0 (0.0)1 (7.1)a0 (0.0)1 (8.3)a2 (3.8)
 Unconfirmed partial response0 (0.0)0 (0.0)0 (0.0)1 (8.3)a1 (1.9)
 No response6 (40.0)8 (57.1)3 (27.3)3 (25.0)20 (38.5)
 No valid cytogenetic measurement7 (46.7)4 (28.6)7 (63.6)7 (58.3)25 (48.1)
      
Best hematologic response
 Major responseNA0 (0.0)0 (0)0 (0.0)0 (0)
 Complete response2 (13.3)a0 (0.0)0 (0)0 (0.0)2 (3.8)
 Unconfirmed NELNA0 (0.0)0 (0)1 (8.3)b1 (1.9)
 Minor responseNA4 (28.6)d0 (0)1 (8.3)a5 (9.6)
 No response0 (0.0)10 (71.4)11 (100.0)10 (83.3)31 (59.6)
 No valid hematologic measurement13 (86.7)0 (0.0)0 (0.0)0 (0.0)13 (25.0)

Abbreviations: CML, chronic myelogenous leukemia; NA, not applicable; NEL, no evidence of leukemia; Ph+ ALL, Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Treatment started at 40 mg/m2/h.

Treatment started at 24 mg/m2/h.

Treatment started at 32 mg/m2/h.

Treatment started at 40 mg/m2/h for three patients and 32 mg/m2/h for one patient.

Safety and tolerability

Overall, 94% of patients had at least one AE; all patients in the 40 mg/m2/h and 32 mg/m2/h treatment groups and 80% of patients in the 24 mg/m2/h group experienced at least one AE (Table 3). Generally, the rate and intensity of AEs were dose dependent (Table 3). The most common AEs were related to blood and lymphatic system disorders (69%) and gastrointestinal disorders (60%). Treatment-emergent AEs included neutropenia (50%), anemia (37%), febrile neutropenia (35%), diarrhea (35%), thrombocytopenia (29%) and nausea (23% Table 3). Although gastrointestinal disorders were experienced by a high number of patients, most were grade 1 or 2. The most common grade 3 or 4 AEs were neutropenia (46%), febrile neutropenia (35%), thrombocytopenia (29%) and anemia (21% Table 3). Twenty-one patients (40%) experienced an infection and/or infestation during the study, with the highest rate of infection occurring in the 40-mg/m2/h treatment group (58%), followed by 27% and 20% of patients for the 32-mg/m2/h and 24-mg/m2/h treatment groups, respectively. Two grade 4 infections were observed: one patient in the 40-mg/m2/h treatment group experienced septic shock and one patient in the 32-mg/m2/h treatment group developed cellulitis. One patient in the 40-mg/m2/h treatment group died of Klebsiella infection.
Table 3

Adverse events occurring in at least 10% of all patients following treatment with MK-0467

Adverse event, n (%)MK-0457 starting dose level
  
 24mg/m2/h n=15
32mg/m2/h n=11
40mg/m2/h n=26
All patients n=52
 All gradesGrades 3-4All gradesGrades 3-4All gradesGrades 3-4All gradesGrades 3-4
Patients with ⩾1 AE12 (80.0)11 (100.0)26 (100.0)49 (94.2)
Neutropenia2 (13.3)2 (13.3)8 (72.7)8 (72.7)16 (61.5)14 (53.8)26 (50.0)24 (46.2)
Anemia4 (26.7)0 (0)3 (27.3)2 (18.2)12 (46.2)9 (34.6)19 (36.5)11 (21.2)
Febrile neutropenia3 (20.0)3 (20.0)7 (63.6)7 (63.6)8 (30.8)8 (30.8)18 (34.6)18 (34.6)
Diarrhea2 (13.3)0 (0)3 (27.3)0 (0)13 (50.0)2 (7.7)18 (34.6)2 (3.8)
Thrombocytopenia0 (0)0 (0)5 (45.5)5 (45.5)10 (38.5)10 (38.5)15 (28.8)15 (28.8)
Nausea1 (6.7)0 (0)2 (18.2)0 (0)9 (34.6)3 (11.5)12 (23.1)3 (5.8)
Increased alanine aminotransferase2 (13.3)0 (0)1 (9.1)1 (9.1)8 (30.8)5 (19.2)11 (21.2)7 (13.5)
Pyrexia2 (13.3)0 (0)1 (9.1)0 (0)7 (26.9)2 (7.7)10 (19.2)2 (3.8)
Headache2 (13.3)0 (0)1 (9.1)0 (0)6 (23.1)0 (0)9 (17.3)0 (0)
Leukopenia1 (6.7)1 (6.7)1 (9.1)1 (9.1)6 (23.1)6 (23.1)8 (15.4)8 (15.4)
Hyperbilirubinemia1 (6.7)0 (0)2 (18.2)2 (18.2)5 (19.2)2 (7.7)8 (15.4)4 (7.7)
Arthralgia1 (6.7)0 (0)0 (0)0 (0)7 (26.9)1 (3.8)8 (15.4)1 (1.9)
Pharyngolaryngeal pain1 (6.7)0 (0)1 (9.1)0 (0)6 (23.1)0 (0)8 (15.4)0 (0)
Hypokalemia0 (0)0 (0)3 (27.3)3 (27.3)4 (15.4)3 (11.5)7 (13.5)6 (11.5)
Stomatitis0 (0)0 (0)2 (18.2)2 (18.2)5 (19.2)0 (0)7 (13.5)2 (3.8)
Increased aspartate aminotransferase2 (13.3)0 (0)1 (9.1)0 (0)4 (15.4)1 (3.8)7 (13.5)1 (1.9)
Rash1 (6.7)0 (0)1 (9.1)0 (0)5 (19.2)1 (3.8)7 (13.5)1 (1.9)
Abdominal pain upper0 (0)0 (0)0 (0)0 (0)7 (26.9)0 (0)7 (13.5)0 (0)
Fatigue0 (0)0 (0)3 (27.3)1 (9.1)3 (11.5)0 (0)6 (11.5)1 (1.9)
Myalgia0 (0)0 (0)0 (0)0 (0)6 (23.1)0 (0)6 (11.5)0 (0)
Mucosal inflammation0 (0)0 (0)2 (18.2)0 (0)3 (11.5)1 (3.8)5 (9.6)1 (1.9)
Edema peripheral0 (0)0 (0)2 (18.2)1 (9.1)3 (11.5)0 (0)5 (9.6)1 (1.9)
Dyspnea2 (13.3)1 (6.7)0 (0)0 (0)3 (11.5)0 (0)5 (9.6)1 (1.9)
Vomiting0 (0)0 (0)1 (9.1)0 (0)4 (15.4)0 (0)5 (9.6)0 (0)

Abbreviation: AE, adverse event.

Serious AEs were reported in 65% of patients. The highest rates of serious AEs were observed in the 40-mg/m2/h and 32-mg/m2/h treatment groups (73% and 64%, respectively), and 20% of patients experienced serious AEs in the 24-mg/m2/h group. Serious AEs that occurred in at least two patients included neutropenia (27%), febrile neutropenia (21%), pneumonia (6%), thrombocytopenia (6%), stomatitis (6%), peau d'orange (4%), electrocardiogram QT prolonged (4%) and pyrexia (4%). Seven patients (14%) died during the study. Causes of death included progressive CML, cardiac failure, cerebral hemorrhage, neutropenia, acute pulmonary edema, Klebsiella infection and ‘somnolence'. Four patients in the 40-mg/m2/h treatment group died, one patient in the 32-mg/m2/h treatment group died and two patients in the 24-mg/m2/h treatment group died. Deaths due to cardiac failure, cerebral hemorrhage and neutropenia were reported by the investigator as drug related. More than 60% of patients starting at the 40-mg/m2/h dose required at least one dose reduction, compared with 7% of patients starting treatment at the 24-mg/m2/h dose. At the time when the study was discontinued, patients had received a median of two treatment cycles (range 1–14; mean 3.04 cycles). One patient, deemed by the investigator to be deriving clinical benefit with MK-0457, was permitted to continue receiving treatment after the study was discontinued and received a total of 25 cycles of treatment.

Discussion

Aurora kinases are critical regulators of mitosis and have been implicated in cancer progression.[11] Inhibition of aurora kinases has therefore been pursued for the development of anticancer agents.[11] MK-0457 is a potent inhibitor of aurora kinases with cross-reactivity to other kinases such as FLT3 and ABL. Leukemia patients carrying the ABL T315I mutation are often resistant to all available tyrosine kinase inhibitors, presenting the clinical challenge of finding effective treatment options. These patients tend to have a poor prognosis, highlighting the need to develop new therapies to overcome this resistance.[6] Recent results from phase 1 and 2 trials evaluating the pan-BCR-ABL inhibitor ponatinib and the protein synthesis inhibitor omacetaxine have demonstrated efficacy in these poor-prognosis patients.[15,16] The number of patients who achieved cytogenetic response in a phase 2 trial of ponatinib was high; the subgroup of patients carrying the T315I mutation had higher response rates than those without,[17] but cardiovascular and thrombotic AE limit the clinical appeal of this agent. In this phase 2 study in patients with ABL T315I-mutated leukemia, cytogenetic responses were observed in 14% of patients (8% confirmed, 6% unconfirmed) with chronic and advanced-stage CML or Ph+ ALL. A significant number of patients were not evaluable for cytogenetic (48% of patients) or hematologic (25% of patients) responses; no responses were observed in 39% of patients and 60% of patients, respectively. Bone marrow biopsies were collected every other cycle to assess cytogenetic response and the likelihood of a patient discontinuing (due to toxicity, for example) prior to an assessment was high. The fact that a high percentage of patients were un-evaluable for response, may potentially explain the discrepancy with the positive responses reported in the phase 1/2 dose-escalation study in patients with refractory hematologic malignancies.[4] Many of the patients entered the current study heavily pretreated and with advanced disease. In general, MK-0457 was tolerated at lower doses and no unexpected toxicities were observed in this patient population. Higher doses were associated with an increase in the incidence and severity of adverse events. Preliminary results from a phase 1 study in patients with solid tumors, presented after initiation of the current study, showed that infusion of 10 mg/m2/h MK-0457 over 5 days in a 28-day cycle was the maximum tolerated dose.[18] Neutropenia was the most common AE, consistent with previously published reports, and likely due to aurora kinase inhibition on rapidly proliferating non-cancer cells.[4,11,13,19] Additional hematologic and gastrointestinal disorders were also observed and overlap with the AE profile reported in other studies. Although gastrointestinal disorders were common, they were primarily grade 1 and 2. Gut epithelium contain rapidly cycling cells, potentially leading to the gastrointestinal events observed.[4,11,13,19] In another phase 1 dose-escalation study in patients with advanced solid tumors, MK-0457 was administered as a 24-hour continuous intravenous infusion and was generally well tolerated in this heavily pretreated patient population. The maximum tolerated dose was 64 mg/m2/h. Stable disease was achieved for almost half of the 27 patients.[19] A number of aurora kinase inhibitors currently in development for the treatment of hematologic malignancies have also demonstrated inhibitory activity (half maximal inhibitory concentration values ranging from 4 to 81 nmol/l) in patients with the ABL T315I mutation, including ENMD-2076 and AT9283.[8] Preclinical studies using cancer cells have demonstrated that aurora kinase inhibitors may provide benefit as part of combination therapy or in select patient populations. Cancer cells depleted of aurora-A were sensitized to the effect of chemotherapeutic agents, including taxanes, cisplatin, docetaxel and ionizing radiation.[20, 21, 22, 23] Multiple cancer cell lines with defective p53-p21 pathways were more sensitive to the effects of MK-0457 than cells with wild-type p53-p21 pathways.[24] Although clinical development of MK-0457 has ceased, results from this and other studies that have evaluated the effects of aurora kinase inhibitors may help to guide selection and development of future anticancer agents, in combination or in select patient populations, and their use as potential chemosensitizers may be explored further.
  23 in total

Review 1.  Discovery and development of aurora kinase inhibitors as anticancer agents.

Authors:  John R Pollard; Michael Mortimore
Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2009-05-14       Impact factor: 7.446

Review 2.  The potential role of Aurora kinase inhibitors in haematological malignancies.

Authors:  Sherif S Farag
Journal:  Br J Haematol       Date:  2011-10-08       Impact factor: 6.998

Review 3.  Chronic myeloid leukemia: state of the art in 2012.

Authors:  Carmen Fava; Giovanna Rege-Cambrin; Giuseppe Saglio
Journal:  Curr Oncol Rep       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 5.075

4.  Phase I dose escalation study of MK-0457, a novel Aurora kinase inhibitor, in adult patients with advanced solid tumors.

Authors:  Anne M Traynor; Maureen Hewitt; Glenn Liu; Keith T Flaherty; Jason Clark; Steven J Freedman; Boyd B Scott; Ann Marie Leighton; Patricia A Watson; Baiteng Zhao; Peter J O'Dwyer; George Wilding
Journal:  Cancer Chemother Pharmacol       Date:  2010-04-13       Impact factor: 3.333

5.  Inhibition of drug-resistant mutants of ABL, KIT, and EGF receptor kinases.

Authors:  Todd A Carter; Lisa M Wodicka; Neil P Shah; Anne Marie Velasco; Miles A Fabian; Daniel K Treiber; Zdravko V Milanov; Corey E Atteridge; William H Biggs; Philip T Edeen; Mark Floyd; Julia M Ford; Robert M Grotzfeld; Sanna Herrgard; Darren E Insko; Shamal A Mehta; Hitesh K Patel; William Pao; Charles L Sawyers; Harold Varmus; Patrick P Zarrinkar; David J Lockhart
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2005-07-26       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Structural basis for potent inhibition of the Aurora kinases and a T315I multi-drug resistant mutant form of Abl kinase by VX-680.

Authors:  G M T Cheetham; P A Charlton; J M C Golec; J R Pollard
Journal:  Cancer Lett       Date:  2007-01-19       Impact factor: 8.679

7.  MK-0457, a novel kinase inhibitor, is active in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia or acute lymphocytic leukemia with the T315I BCR-ABL mutation.

Authors:  Francis J Giles; Jorge Cortes; Dan Jones; Donald Bergstrom; Hagop Kantarjian; Steven J Freedman
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2006-09-21       Impact factor: 22.113

8.  The Aurora kinase inhibitor VX-680 induces endoreduplication and apoptosis preferentially in cells with compromised p53-dependent postmitotic checkpoint function.

Authors:  Farid Gizatullin; Yao Yao; Victor Kung; Matthew W Harding; Massimo Loda; Geoffrey I Shapiro
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2006-08-01       Impact factor: 12.701

9.  VX-680, a potent and selective small-molecule inhibitor of the Aurora kinases, suppresses tumor growth in vivo.

Authors:  Elizabeth A Harrington; David Bebbington; Jeff Moore; Richele K Rasmussen; Abi O Ajose-Adeogun; Tomoko Nakayama; Joanne A Graham; Cecile Demur; Thierry Hercend; Anita Diu-Hercend; Michael Su; Julian M C Golec; Karen M Miller
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2004-02-22       Impact factor: 53.440

10.  Enhancement of radiation response by inhibition of Aurora-A kinase using siRNA or a selective Aurora kinase inhibitor PHA680632 in p53-deficient cancer cells.

Authors:  Y Tao; P Zhang; V Frascogna; Y Lecluse; A Auperin; J Bourhis; E Deutsch
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2007-11-20       Impact factor: 7.640

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  25 in total

1.  A phase 1, first-in-human study of AMG 900, an orally administered pan-Aurora kinase inhibitor, in adult patients with advanced solid tumors.

Authors:  Michael Carducci; Montaser Shaheen; Ben Markman; Sara Hurvitz; Daruka Mahadevan; Dusan Kotasek; Oscar B Goodman; Erik Rasmussen; Vincent Chow; Gloria Juan; Gregory R Friberg; Erick Gamelin; Florian D Vogl; Jayesh Desai
Journal:  Invest New Drugs       Date:  2018-07-07       Impact factor: 3.850

Review 2.  Management of Elderly Patients with Newly Diagnosed Chronic Myeloid Leukemia in the Accelerated or Blastic Phase.

Authors:  Uday Deotare; Dennis Dong Hwan Kim; Jeffrey H Lipton
Journal:  Drugs Aging       Date:  2016-05       Impact factor: 3.923

Review 3.  The Relevance of Aurora Kinase Inhibition in Hematological Malignancies.

Authors:  Caio Bezerra Machado; Emerson Lucena DA Silva; Beatriz Maria Dias Nogueira; Jean Breno Silveira DA Silva; Manoel Odorico DE Moraes Filho; Raquel Carvalho Montenegro; Maria Elisabete Amaral DE Moraes; Caroline Aquino Moreira-Nunes
Journal:  Cancer Diagn Progn       Date:  2021-07-03

Review 4.  The Aurora kinase inhibitors in cancer research and therapy.

Authors:  Jonas Cicenas
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2016-03-01       Impact factor: 4.553

Review 5.  The Role of New Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors in Chronic Myeloid Leukemia.

Authors:  Priyanka A Pophali; Mrinal M Patnaik
Journal:  Cancer J       Date:  2016 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 3.360

6.  Aurora kinase inhibitor tozasertib suppresses mast cell activation in vitro and in vivo.

Authors:  Li-Na Zhang; Kunmei Ji; Yue-Tong Sun; Yi-Bo Hou; Jia-Jie Chen
Journal:  Br J Pharmacol       Date:  2020-04-06       Impact factor: 8.739

7.  The aurora kinase inhibitor VX-680 shows anti-cancer effects in primary metastatic cells and the SW13 cell line.

Authors:  Raffaele Pezzani; Beatrice Rubin; Loris Bertazza; Marco Redaelli; Susi Barollo; Halenya Monticelli; Enke Baldini; Caterina Mian; Carla Mucignat; Carla Scaroni; Franco Mantero; Salvatore Ulisse; Maurizio Iacobone; Marco Boscaro
Journal:  Invest New Drugs       Date:  2016-05-14       Impact factor: 3.850

Review 8.  Aurora kinases: novel therapy targets in cancers.

Authors:  Anqun Tang; Keyu Gao; Laili Chu; Rui Zhang; Jing Yang; Junnian Zheng
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-04-04

Review 9.  Turning liabilities into opportunities: Off-target based drug repurposing in cancer.

Authors:  Vinayak Palve; Yi Liao; Lily L Remsing Rix; Uwe Rix
Journal:  Semin Cancer Biol       Date:  2020-02-07       Impact factor: 15.707

Review 10.  Aurora kinase A, a synthetic lethal target for precision cancer medicine.

Authors:  Pui Kei Mou; Eun Ju Yang; Changxiang Shi; Guowen Ren; Shishi Tao; Joong Sup Shim
Journal:  Exp Mol Med       Date:  2021-05-28       Impact factor: 8.718

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