| Literature DB >> 32603316 |
Zachary Miklja1, Viveka Nand Yadav1, Rodrigo T Cartaxo1, Ruby Siada1, Chase C Thomas1, Jessica R Cummings1, Brendan Mullan1, Stefanie Stallard1, Alyssa Paul1, Amy K Bruzek2, Kyle Wierzbicki1, Tao Yang3, Taylor Garcia1, Ian Wolfe1, Marcia Leonard1, Patricia L Robertson3, Hugh Jl Garton2, Daniel R Wahl4, Hemant Parmar5, Jann N Sarkaria6, Cassie Kline7,8, Sabine Mueller7,8, Theodore Nicolaides9, Chana Glasser10, Sarah Es Leary11, Sriram Venneti12, Chandan Kumar-Sinha12,13, Arul M Chinnaiyan12,13,14,15,16, Rajen Mody1, Manjunath P Pai17, Timothy N Phoenix18, Bernard L Marini17, Carl Koschmann1.
Abstract
Pediatric and adult high-grade gliomas (HGGs) frequently harbor PDGFRA alterations. We hypothesized that cotreatment with everolimus may improve the efficacy of dasatinib in PDGFRα-driven glioma through combinatorial synergism and increased tumor accumulation of dasatinib. We performed dose-response, synergism, P-glycoprotein inhibition, and pharmacokinetic studies in in vitro and in vivo human and mouse models of HGG. Six patients with recurrent PDGFRα-driven glioma were treated with dasatinib and everolimus. We found that dasatinib effectively inhibited the proliferation of mouse and human primary HGG cells with a variety of PDGFRA alterations. Dasatinib exhibited synergy with everolimus in the treatment of HGG cells at low nanomolar concentrations of both agents, with a reduction in mTOR signaling that persisted after dasatinib treatment alone. Prolonged exposure to everolimus significantly improved the CNS retention of dasatinib and extended the survival of PPK tumor-bearing mice (mutant TP53, mutant PDGFRA, H3K27M). Six pediatric patients with glioma tolerated this combination without significant adverse events, and 4 patients with recurrent disease (n = 4) had a median overall survival of 8.5 months. Our results show that the efficacy of dasatinib treatment of PDGFRα-driven HGG was enhanced with everolimus and suggest a promising route for improving targeted therapy for this patient population.Entities:
Keywords: Brain cancer; Molecular biology; Oncology; Pharmacology
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32603316 PMCID: PMC7524471 DOI: 10.1172/JCI133310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808