High in vitro and in vivo activity of BI-847325, a dual MEK/Aurora kinase inhibitor, in human solid and hematologic cancer models.
Vincent VuaroqueauxAlexandra MuschAnne-Lise PeilleGerhard KelterLoreen WeichertThomas MetzHans R HendriksHeinz-Herbert FiebigPublished in: Cancer research communications (2023)
BI-847325 is an ATP-competitive inhibitor of MEK/Aurora kinases with the potential to treat a wide range of cancers. In a panel of 294 human tumor cell lines in vitro, BI-847325 was found to be a highly selective inhibitor that was active in the sub-micromolar range. The most sensitive cancer types were acute lymphocytic and myelocytic leukemia, melanomas, bladder, colorectal, and mammary cancers. BI-847325 showed a broader range of activity than the MEK inhibitor GDC-0623. The high efficacy of BI-847325 was associated with but not limited to cell lines with oncogenic mutations in NRAS, BRAF, and MAP2K1. The high antiproliferative activity of BI-847325 was validated in vivo using subcutaneous xenograft models. After oral administration of 80 and 40 mg/kg once weekly for 3 or 4 weeks, BI-847325 was highly active in 4/5 colorectal, 2/2 gastric, 2/2 mammary, and 1/1 pancreatic cancer models (T/C < 25%), and tumor regressions were observed in 5/11 cancer models. The treatment was well tolerated with no relevant lethality or body weight changes. In combination with capecitabine, BI-847325 displayed synergism over single-agent therapies, leading to complete remission in the triple-negative mammary model MAXFTN 401, partial regression in the colon model CXF 1103, and stasis in the gastric models GXA 3011 and GXA 3023. In conclusion, dual MEK/Aurora kinase inhibition shows remarkable potential for treating multiple types of hematological and solid tumors. The combination with capecitabine was synergistic in colorectal, gastric, and mammary cancer.
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