| Literature DB >> 35267628 |
Damien Reita1,2, Lucile Pabst3, Erwan Pencreach1,4, Eric Guérin1,4, Laurent Dano1, Valérie Rimelen1, Anne-Claire Voegeli1, Laurent Vallat1, Céline Mascaux3,4, Michèle Beau-Faller1,4.
Abstract
KRAS is the most frequently mutated oncogene in non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC), with a frequency of around 30%, and encoding a GTPAse that cycles between active form (GTP-bound) to inactive form (GDP-bound). The KRAS mutations favor the active form with inhibition of GTPAse activity. KRAS mutations are often with poor response of EGFR targeted therapies. KRAS mutations are good predictive factor for immunotherapy. The lack of success with direct targeting of KRAS proteins, downstream inhibition of KRAS effector pathways, and other strategies contributed to a focus on developing mutation-specific KRAS inhibitors. KRAS p.G12C mutation is one of the most frequent KRAS mutation in NSCLC, especially in current and former smokers (over 40%), which occurs among approximately 12-14% of NSCLC tumors. The mutated cysteine resides next to a pocket (P2) of the switch II region, and P2 is present only in the inactive GDP-bound KRAS. Small molecules such as sotorasib are now the first targeted drugs for KRAS G12C mutation, preventing conversion of the mutant protein to GTP-bound active state. Little is known about primary or acquired resistance. Acquired resistance does occur and may be due to genetic alterations in the nucleotide exchange function or adaptative mechanisms in either downstream pathways or in newly expressed KRAS G12C mutation.Entities:
Keywords: KRAS G12C inhibitors; KRAS mutations; non-small cell lung cancer; phenotypic changes; resistance mechanisms
Year: 2022 PMID: 35267628 PMCID: PMC8909472 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14051321
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1KRAS mutations at codon 12 and codon 13. (A) Nomenclature by nucleotide and by amino acids; (B) Repartition of the different KRAS mutations at codon 12 and codon 13 in NSCLC [17].
Figure 2KRAS signaling. (A) KRAS signaling pathway. (B) KRAS “molecular switch”.
Activity of KRAS G12C inhibitors in early phase clinical trials; results of phases I/II with sotorasib or adagrasib [14,46].
| KRAS G12C Inhibitors | AMG 510 (Sotorasib) | MRTX849 (Adagrasib) |
|---|---|---|
| Reference | [ | [ |
| Clinical trial | Phase II | Phase I/II |
| Patient population | KRAS G12C mutated advanced cancers | KRAS G12C mutated advanced cancers |
| Study population (n) | 59 NSCLC | 79 NSCLC, 51 evaluable |
| ORR (%) | 37 (CR 3.2) | 45 |
| DCR (%) | 80.6 | 96 |
| mDOR (mo) | 11.1 | NR |
| mPFS (mo) | 6.8 | NR |
| mOS (mo) | 12.5 | NR |
ORR: overall response rate; CR: complete response; DCR: disease-control rate; mDOR: median duration of response; mPFS: median progression-free survival; mOS: median overall survival; and NR: not reported.
Figure 3Mechanisms of resistance under KRAS G12C inhibitors.