Allosteric PI3K-alpha inhibition overcomes on-target resistance to orthosteric inhibitors mediated by secondary PIK3CA mutations.
Andreas VarkarisFerran Fece de la CruzElizabeth E MartinBryanna L NordenNicholas ChevalierAllison M KehlmannIgnaty LeshchinerHaley BarnesSara EhnstromAnastasia-Maria StavridiXin YuanJanice S KimHaley EllisAlkistis PapatheodoridiHakan GunaydinBrian P DanyshLaxmi ParidaIoannis SanidasYongli JiKayao LauGerburg M WulfAditya BardiaLaura M SpringSteven Jay IsakoffJochen K LennerzLevi PierceErmira PazolliGad A GetzRyan B CorcoranDejan JuricPublished in: Cancer discovery (2023)
PIK3CA mutations occur in ~8% of cancers, including ~40% of HR-positive breast cancers, where the PI3K-alpha (PI3Ka)-selective inhibitor alpelisib is FDA-approved in combination with fulvestrant. Although prior studies have identified resistance mechanisms, such as PTEN loss, clinical acquired resistance to PI3Ka inhibitors remains poorly understood. Through serial liquid biopsies and rapid autopsies in 39 patients with advanced breast cancer developing acquired resistance to PI3Ka-inhibitors, we observe that 50% of patients acquire genomic alterations within the PI3K-pathway, including PTEN loss and activating AKT1 mutations. Notably, while secondary PIK3CA mutations were previously reported to increase sensitivity to PI3Ka-inhibitors, we identified emergent secondary resistance mutations in PIK3CA that alter the inhibitor binding pocket. Some mutations had differential effects on PI3Ka-selective vs. pan-PI3K inhibitors, but resistance induced by all mutations could be overcome by the novel allosteric pan-mutant-selective PI3Ka-inhibitor RLY-2608. Together, these findings provide insights to guide strategies to overcome resistance in PIK3CA-mutated cancers.