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ERK Inhibitor LY3214996-Based Treatment Strategies for RAS-Driven Lung Cancer.

Jens KöhlerYutong ZhaoJiaqi LiPrafulla C GokhaleHong L TivAine R KnottMargaret K WilkensKara M SorokoMika LinChiara AmbrogioMonica MusteanuAtsuko OginoJihyun ChoiMagda BahcallArrien A BertramEmily S ChambersCloud P PaweletzShripad V BhagwatJason R ManroRamon V TiuPasi A Jänne
Published in: Molecular cancer therapeutics (2021)
RAS gene mutations are the most frequent oncogenic event in lung cancer. They activate multiple RAS-centric signaling networks among them the MAPK, PI3K, and RB pathways. Within the MAPK pathway, ERK1/2 proteins exert a bottleneck function for transmitting mitogenic signals and activating cytoplasmic and nuclear targets. In view of disappointing antitumor activity and toxicity of continuously applied MEK inhibitors in patients with KRAS-mutant lung cancer, research has recently focused on ERK1/2 proteins as therapeutic targets and on ERK inhibitors for their ability to prevent bypass and feedback pathway activation. Here, we show that intermittent application of the novel and selective ATP-competitive ERK1/2 inhibitor LY3214996 exerts single-agent activity in patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models of RAS-mutant lung cancer. Combination treatments were well tolerated and resulted in synergistic (ERKi plus PI3K/mTORi LY3023414) and additive (ERKi plus CDK4/6i abemaciclib) tumor growth inhibition in PDX models. Future clinical trials are required to investigate if intermittent ERK inhibitor-based treatment schedules can overcome toxicities observed with continuous MEK inhibition and-equally important-to identify biomarkers for patient stratification.
Keyphrases
  • signaling pathway
  • pi k akt
  • wild type
  • cell proliferation
  • clinical trial
  • oxidative stress
  • high intensity
  • randomized controlled trial
  • cell cycle
  • smoking cessation