Back to Search Start Over

Multimodal platform for assessing drug distribution and response in clinical trials

Authors :
Giorgio Gaglia
Ziming Du
Louis B. Nabors
Yang Dai
Ishwar N. Kohale
Ilya Korsunsky
Brian M. Alexander
Jann N. Sarkaria
Eudocia Q. Lee
Patrick Y. Wen
Michael S. Regan
Sankha S. Basu
Soumya Raychaudhuri
Elizabeth C. Randall
Keith L. Ligon
Bianca-Maria Marin
Forest M. White
Ann C. Mladek
Sandro Santagata
Nathalie Y. R. Agar
Stuart A. Grossman
Danielle M. Burgenske
Jeffrey G. Supko
Jeffrey N. Agar
Amanda R Clark
Sylwia A. Stopka
Walid M. Abdelmoula
Begoña Gimenez-Cassina Lopez
Source :
Neuro Oncol
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background Response to targeted therapy varies between patients for largely unknown reasons. Here, we developed and applied an integrative platform using mass spectrometry imaging (MSI), phosphoproteomics, and multiplexed tissue imaging for mapping drug distribution, target engagement, and adaptive response to gain insights into heterogeneous response to therapy. Methods Patient-derived xenograft (PDX) lines of glioblastoma were treated with adavosertib, a Wee1 inhibitor, and tissue drug distribution was measured with MALDI-MSI. Phosphoproteomics was measured in the same tumors to identify biomarkers of drug target engagement and cellular adaptive response. Multiplexed tissue imaging was performed on sister sections to evaluate spatial co-localization of drug and cellular response. The integrated platform was then applied on clinical specimens from glioblastoma patients enrolled in the phase 1 clinical trial. Results PDX tumors exposed to different doses of adavosertib revealed intra- and inter-tumoral heterogeneity of drug distribution and integration of the heterogeneous drug distribution with phosphoproteomics and multiplexed tissue imaging revealed new markers of molecular response to adavosertib. Analysis of paired clinical specimens from patients enrolled in the phase 1 clinical trial informed the translational potential of the identified biomarkers in studying patient’s response to adavosertib. Conclusions The multimodal platform identified a signature of drug efficacy and patient-specific adaptive responses applicable to preclinical and clinical drug development. The information generated by the approach may inform mechanisms of success and failure in future early phase clinical trials, providing information for optimizing clinical trial design and guiding future application into clinical practice.

Details

ISSN :
15235866
Volume :
24
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuro-oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4ebbe4316930d06714e2b8dc562d0e36