1. Pilot study of the antifibrotic effects of the multikinase inhibitor pacritinib in a mouse model of liver fibrosis
- Author
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Al-Fayoumi S, Hashiguchi T, Shirakata Y, Mascarenhas J, and Singer JW
- Subjects
janus kinase 2 ,interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase 1 ,colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor kinase ,steatosis ,myelofibrosis ,liver fibrosis ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Suliman Al-Fayoumi,1 Taishi Hashiguchi,2 Yuka Shirakata,2 John Mascarenhas,3 Jack W Singer1 1CTI BioPharma, Seattle, WA, USA; 2SMC Laboratories, Tokyo, Japan; 3Tish Cancer Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA Background: Fibrotic diseases result from an exuberant response to chronic inflammation. Myelofibrosis is the end result of inflammation in bone, caused by an inflammatory process triggered by production of abnormal myeloid cells driven by mutations affecting the JAK–STAT pathway. Inflammatory cytokine overproduction leads to increased mesenchymal cell proliferation, culminating in fibrosis. Although JAK2 inhibitors, such as the JAK1/2 inhibitor ruxolitinib and the JAK2/FLT3/CSF1R/IRAK1 inhibitor pacritinib suppress abnormal clone expansion in myelofibrosis, ruxolitinib does not appear to prevent or reverse bone-marrow fibrosis in most patients. In two Phase III clinical trials, pacritinib, however, demonstrated improvements in platelet counts and hemoglobin and reductions in transfusion burden in some patients with baseline cytopenias, suggesting it may improve bone-marrow function. Unlike ruxolitinib, pacritinib suppresses signaling through IRAK1, a key control point for inflammatory and fibrotic signaling. Purpose: To investigate potential antifibrotic effects of pacritinib in an animal model of liver fibrosis relevant to the observed course of human disease.Methods: Pacritinib, negative control (vehicle), and positive control (the angiotensin 2-receptor antagonist and PPARγ partial agonist telmisartan) were assessed in the murine Stelic animal model, which mimics the clinically observed progression from hepatic steatosis to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, liver fibrosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma. Histopathological analysis used hematoxylin and eosin staining. Body and liver weight changes, nonalcoholic fatty-liver disease activity scores, and plasma cytokeratin 18 fragment levels (a biomarker of hepatic necrosis) were measured.Results: Pacritinib-treated mice had significantly (P
- Published
- 2018