| Literature DB >> 32350132 |
Erica Banks1, Michael Grondine1, Deepa Bhavsar1, Evan Barry1, Jason G Kettle2, Venkatesh Pilla Reddy3, Crystal Brown1, Haiyun Wang1, Jerome T Mettetal1, Teresa Collins4, Oladipupo Adeyemi5, Ross Overman6, Deborah Lawson1, Alexander R Harmer5, Corinne Reimer1, Lisa Drew1, Martin J Packer2, Sabina Cosulich7, Rhys DO Jones3, Wenlin Shao8, David Wilson2, Sylvie Guichard1, Stephen Fawell1, Rana Anjum9.
Abstract
Gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) is the most common human sarcoma driven by mutations in KIT or platelet-derived growth factor α (PDGFRα). Although first-line treatment, imatinib, has revolutionized GIST treatment, drug resistance due to acquisition of secondary KIT/PDGFRα mutations develops in a majority of patients. Second- and third-line treatments, sunitinib and regorafenib, lack activity against a plethora of mutations in KIT/PDGFRα in GIST, with median time to disease progression of 4 to 6 months and inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (VEGFR2) causing high-grade hypertension. Patients with GIST have an unmet need for a well-tolerated drug that robustly inhibits a range of KIT/PDGFRα mutations. Here, we report the discovery and pharmacological characterization of AZD3229, a potent and selective small-molecule inhibitor of KIT and PDGFRα designed to inhibit a broad range of primary and imatinib-resistant secondary mutations seen in GIST. In engineered and GIST-derived cell lines, AZD3229 is 15 to 60 times more potent than imatinib in inhibiting KIT primary mutations and has low nanomolar activity against a wide spectrum of secondary mutations. AZD3229 causes durable inhibition of KIT signaling in patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models of GIST, leading to tumor regressions at doses that showed no changes in arterial blood pressure (BP) in rat telemetry studies. AZD3229 has a superior potency and selectivity profile to standard of care (SoC) agents-imatinib, sunitinib, and regorafenib, as well as investigational agents, avapritinib (BLU-285) and ripretinib (DCC-2618). AZD3229 has the potential to be a best-in-class inhibitor for clinically relevant KIT/PDGFRα mutations in GIST.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32350132 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aaz2481
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956