| Literature DB >> 35159041 |
Tadeusz Robak1, Magda Witkowska2, Piotr Smolewski2.
Abstract
The use of Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitors has changed the management and clinical history of patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). BTK is a critical molecule that interconnects B-cell antigen receptor (BCR) signaling. BTKis are classified into two categories: irreversible (covalent) inhibitors and reversible (non-covalent) inhibitors. Ibrutinib was the first irreversible BTK inhibitor approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2013 as a breakthrough therapy in CLL patients. Subsequently, several studies have evaluated the efficacy and safety of new agents with reduced toxicity when compared with ibrutinib. Two other irreversible, second-generation BTK inhibitors, acalabrutinib and zanubrutinib, were developed to reduce ibrutinib-mediated adverse effects. Additionally, new reversible BTK inhibitors are currently under development in early-phase studies to improve their activity and to diminish adverse effects. This review summarizes the pharmacology, clinical efficacy, safety, dosing, and drug-drug interactions associated with the treatment of CLL with BTK inhibitors and examines their further implications.Entities:
Keywords: BTK; CLL; COVID-19; DTRMWXHS-12; TG-1701; acalabrutinib; fenebrutinib; ibrutinib; nemtabrutinib; orelabrutinib; pirtobrutinib; spebrutinib; tirabrutinib; zanubrutinib
Year: 2022 PMID: 35159041 PMCID: PMC8833747 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14030771
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Irreversible and reversible Brutton tyrosine kinase inhibitors approved or in clinical trials in chronic lymphocytic leukemia.
| BTKi | Binding | T1/2 | IC50 [nM] | Dosing | Clinical Trials in CLL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ibrutinib | Covalent irreversible C481 | 4–8 | 0.5 | 420 mg | NCT04771507 |
| Acalabrutinib | Covalent irreversible C481 | 0.9 | 5.1 | 100 mg | NCT04008706 |
| Zanubrutinib | Covalent | 2–4 | 0.5 | 160 or 320 mg | NCT04116437 |
| Spebrutinib | Covalent irreversible C481 | 8–24 | <0.5 | 1000 mg | NCT02031419 |
| Tirabrutinib | Covalent irreversible C481 | NA | 5.6 | 80 mg | NCT03740529 |
| Orelabrutinib (ICP-022) | Covalent irreversible C481 | ~1.5–4 h | 1.6 | 150 mg | NCT03493217 |
| SHR1459 | Covalent irreversible C481 | NA | 3 | 300 mg | NCT03671590; NCT04806035 |
| DTRMWXHS-12 (DTRM-12) | Covalent irreversible C481 | ~4 | NA | 200 mg | NCT02900716 |
| Pirtobrutinib | Non-covalent reversible | NA | 0.85 | 200 mg | NCT05023980 |
| Vecabrutinib | Non-covalent reversible | 6.6-8 | 24 | 25 mg escalated to 500 mg | NCT03037645 |
| Fenebrutinib | Non-covalent reversible | 2.2 | 0.91 | 200 mg twice a day | NCT01991184 |
| Nemta | Non-covalent reversible | NA | 0.85 | 65-100 mg | NCT04728893 |
Abbreviations: BTKi—Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitors, NA—not available.
Figure 1Signaling pathways involved in the mechanisms of action of Bruton kinase inhibitors in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells. Abbreviations: AKT—protein kinase B, BCR—B-cell receptor, BLNK—B-cell linker protein Btk: Bruton’s tyrosine kinase, CTLA-4: cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen-4, C481—cysteine residue, CXCL12—C-X-C motif chemokine ligand 12, CXCR4—C-X-C chemokine receptor type 4, EGFR: epidermal growth factor receptor, ERK1/2—extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2, Gα, G β, Gϓ: G protein subunits, ITK—IL2-inducible T-cell kinase, Lyn—member of the Src kinase family, NFkB—nuclear factor kappa B, PI3K—phosphoinositide 3-kinase, PLCG2—phospholipase gamma 2, PKCB—protein kinase C beta, PKCB: protein kinase C beta, PD-1—programmed death-ligand 1, PIP1, PIP2—phosphatidylinositols 1 and 2, Syk—spleen tyrosine kinase, TEC—tyrosine kinase expressed in hepatocellular carcinoma.
Phase 3 clinical trials of BTK inhibitors in relapsed/refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia.
| Study | Treatment | Patients, | Median Age [years] | Median Follow-Up | ORR (CR) | Median PFS | Median OS | Discontinu |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Byrd et al. [ | Ibrutinib vs. | 195 vs. 196 | 67 vs. 67 | 41 | 91% (21%) vs. 82% (11%) | 44.1 m vs. | 67.7 m | 16% |
| Fraser et al. [ | Ibrutinib + BR | 289 vs. | 64 vs. | 34.8 | 87% (38%) vs. 66% (8%) | NR vs. | NR vs. NR, | 24% |
| Sharman et al. [ | Ibrutinib + Ublituximab | 64 vs. | 66 vs. 67 | 41.6 | 83% (17%) vs. | NR vs. | NR vs. NR, | 15% |
| Byrd et al. [ | Acalabrutinib | 268 vs. | 66 vs. 65 | 31.3 | 81.0% (NA) | 38.4 vs. | NR vs. NR | 14.7% |
| Ghia et al. [ | Acalabrutinib | 155 vs. | 65 vs. 67 | 40.9 | 81% (0%) | NR vs. 16.5 m | 89% vs. 80% at 1 y | 14.7% |
| Hillmen | Zanubrutinib | Total 415 | 66 vs. 65 | 15 | 76% (NA) vs. 64%(NA) | 94.9% | 97% vs. 93% at 1 y | 7.8% vs. |
Abbreviations: BR—Bendamustine and rituximab, FCR—fludarabine, cyclophosphamide and rituximab, HR—hazard ratio, IR—idelalisib + rituximab, m—months, N—number of patients, CR—complete remission, PFS—progression free survival, R—rituximab, NA—not available, NR—not reached, O—obinutuzumab, OS—overall survival, R—rituximab, y—year.
Phase 3 clinical trials of BTK inhibitors in treatment naïve CLL.
| Study | Treatment | N | Median Age [years] | Median Follow-Up [months] | ORR (CR) Rate | Median PFS | Median OS | Discontinuation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Burger at al. [ | Ibrutinib vs. | 136 | 73 vs. | 18.4 | 86% (4%) vs. 35% (2%) | NR vs. 18.9 m; | HR 0.16 (95% CI, 0.05–0.56) | 13% for |
| Fraser et al. [ | Ibrutinib + BR | 289 vs. | 64 vs. | 63.7 | 87% (38%) vs. | NR versus | NR vs. NR, | 47% |
| Burger et al. [ | Ibrutinib vs. | 104 vs. | 65 vs. | 36 | 92.3% (20.2%) vs. | 86% vs | 92% vs. | Ibrutinib 34% |
| Moreno et al. [ | Ibrutinib + O vs. Chlorambucil + O | 113 vs. | 70 vs. 72 | 31.3 | 88% (19%) | NR vs. | 86% vs. 85% at 30 m | 9% vs. 13% |
| Woyach et al. [ | BR vs. Ibrutinib vs. Ibrutinib + R. | 183 | 70 vs. | 38 m | 81% vs. 93% vs. 94% at 2 y | 74% vs. 87% vs. 88% at 2 y | 95% vs. | Ibrutinib 37% |
| Shanefelt et al. [ | Ibrutinib vs. | 354 | 56.7 | 33.6 | 95.8% (17.2%) vs. 81.1% (30.3%) | 89.4 vs. 72.9% at 3-yrs | 98,8% | Ibrutinib arm 21.2% |
| Kater et al. [ | Ibrutinib + Venetoclax vs. Chlorambucil + O | 106 | 71 | 27.7 | 86.8% (38.7%) vs. 84.8% (11.4%) | NR | 11 deaths | NA |
| Tam et al. [ | Zanubrutinib vs. BR | 241 vs. | 70 vs. | 26.2 | 94.6% (6.6%) vs. 85.3% (15.1%) | 85.5% vs. 69.5% | 94.3 vs. 94.6 at 2 y | 8.3% vs. 13.7% |
| Sharman et al. [ | Acalalabrutinib vs. Acalalabrutinib + O vs. Chlorambucil + O | 179 vs. | 70 vs. | 46.9 | 89.9% (11.2%) | NR vs. | 88% | Acalabrutinib 30.7% vs. Acalabrutinib + O 25.1% vs. Chlorambucil + O |
Abbreviations: BR—Bendamustine and rituximab, CR—complete remission, FCR—fluorouracil, cyclophosphamide and rituximab, m—months, HR—hazard ratio, N- number of patients, NA—not available, NR—not reached, O—obinutuzumab, ORR—overall response rate, OS—overall survival, PFS—progression free survival, R—rituximab, FCR—rituximab, fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, y—year.