Nicola Colclough 1 , Kan Chen 2 , Peter Johnström 3,4 , Nicole Strittmatter 5 , Yumei Yan 2 , Gail L Wrigley 6 , Magnus Schou 3,4 , Richard Goodwin 5 , Katarina Varnäs 4 , Sally J Adua 7 , Minghui Zhao 7 , Don X Nguyen 7 , Gareth Maglennon 5 , Peter Barton 6 , James Atkinson 5 , Lin Zhang 2 , Annika Janefeldt 8 , Joanne Wilson 9 , Aaron Smith 9 , Akihiro Takano 4 , Ryosuke Arakawa 4 , Mikhail Kondrashov 4 , Jonas Malmquist 4 , Evgeny Revunov 4 , Ana Vazquez-Romero 4 , Mohammad Mahdi Moein 4 , Albert D Windhorst 10 , Natasha A Karp 11 , M Raymond V Finlay 6 , Richard A Ward 6 , James W T Yates 9 , Paul D Smith 12 , Lars Farde 3,4 , Zack Cheng 2 , Darren A E Cross 12 . Show Affiliations »
Abstract
PURPOSE: Osimertinib is a potent and selective EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor (EGFR-TKI) of both sensitizing and T790M resistance mutations. To treat metastatic brain disease, blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability is considered desirable for increasing clinical efficacy. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We examined the level of brain penetration for 16 irreversible and reversible EGFR-TKIs using multiple in vitro and in vivo BBB preclinical models. RESULTS: In vitro osimertinib was the weakest substrate for human BBB efflux transporters (efflux ratio 3.2). In vivo rat free brain to free plasma ratios (Kpuu) show osimertinib has the most BBB penetrance (0.21), compared with the other TKIs (Kpuu ≤ 0.12). PET imaging in Cynomolgus macaques demonstrated osimertinib was the only TKI among those tested to achieve significant brain penetrance (C max %ID 1.5, brain/blood Kp 2.6). Desorption electrospray ionization mass spectroscopy images of brains from mouse PC9 macrometastases models showed osimertinib readily distributes across both healthy brain and tumor tissue. Comparison of osimertinib with the poorly BBB penetrant afatinib in a mouse PC9 model of subclinical brain metastases showed only osimertinib has a significant effect on rate of brain tumor growth. CONCLUSIONS: These preclinical studies indicate that osimertinib can achieve significant exposure in the brain compared with the other EGFR-TKIs tested and supports the ongoing clinical evaluation of osimertinib for the treatment of EGFR-mutant brain metastasis. This work also demonstrates the link between low in vitro transporter efflux ratios and increased brain penetrance in vivo supporting the use of in vitro transporter assays as an early screen in drug discovery. ©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.
PURPOSE: Osimertinib is a potent and selective EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor (EGFR-TKI) of both sensitizing and T790M resistance mutations. To treat metastatic brain disease, blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability is considered desirable for increasing clinical efficacy. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We examined the level of brain penetration for 16 irreversible and reversible EGFR-TKIs using multiple in vitro and in vivo BBB preclinical models. RESULTS: In vitro osimertinib was the weakest substrate for human BBB efflux transporters (efflux ratio 3.2). In vivo rat free brain to free plasma ratios (Kpuu) show osimertinib has the most BBB penetrance (0.21), compared with the other TKIs (Kpuu ≤ 0.12). PET imaging in Cynomolgus macaques demonstrated osimertinib was the only TKI among those tested to achieve significant brain penetrance (C max %ID 1.5, brain/blood Kp 2.6). Desorption electrospray ionization mass spectroscopy images of brains from mouse PC9 macrometastases models showed osimertinib readily distributes across both healthy brain and tumor tissue. Comparison of osimertinib with the poorly BBB penetrant afatinib in a mouse PC9 model of subclinical brain metastases showed only osimertinib has a significant effect on rate of brain tumor growth. CONCLUSIONS: These preclinical studies indicate that osimertinib can achieve significant exposure in the brain compared with the other EGFR-TKIs tested and supports the ongoing clinical evaluation of osimertinib for the treatment of EGFR-mutant brain metastasis. This work also demonstrates the link between low in vitro transporter efflux ratios and increased brain penetrance in vivo supporting the use of in vitro transporter assays as an early screen in drug discovery. ©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.
Entities: Chemical
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Year: 2020
PMID: 33028591 DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-19-1871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 1078-0432 Impact factor: 12.531