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Data from Glesatinib Exhibits Antitumor Activity in Lung Cancer Models and Patients Harboring MET Exon 14 Mutations and Overcomes Mutation-mediated Resistance to Type I MET Inhibitors in Nonclinical Models

Authors :
James G. Christensen
Pasi A. Jänne
Mark M. Awad
Nir Peled
Geoffrey I. Shapiro
Mizuki Nishino
Carrie Graveel
Sandip Pravin Patel
Lyudmilla Bazhenova
Peter Olson
Richard B. Lanman
Darya I. Chudova
Richard Chao
Vanessa Tassell
Manuel Hidalgo
Camino Menendez
Natalia Baños
Pedro P. Lopez-Casas
Jill Hallin
David Briere
Harrah Chiang
Zachary Madaj
Curt J. Essenburg
Elizabeth A. Tovar
Matthew Lee
Ruth Aranda
Lars D. Engstrom
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose: MET exon 14 deletion (METex14 del) mutations represent a novel class of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) driver mutations. We evaluated glesatinib, a spectrum-selective MET inhibitor exhibiting a type II binding mode, in METex14 del–positive nonclinical models and NSCLC patients and assessed its ability to overcome resistance to type I MET inhibitors.Experimental Design: As most MET inhibitors in clinical development bind the active site with a type I binding mode, we investigated mechanisms of acquired resistance to each MET inhibitor class utilizing in vitro and in vivo models and in glesatinib clinical trials.Results: Glesatinib inhibited MET signaling, demonstrated marked regression of METex14 del-driven patient-derived xenografts, and demonstrated a durable RECIST partial response in a METex14 del mutation-positive patient enrolled on a glesatinib clinical trial. Prolonged treatment of nonclinical models with selected MET inhibitors resulted in differences in resistance kinetics and mutations within the MET activation loop (i.e., D1228N, Y1230C/H) that conferred resistance to type I MET inhibitors, but remained sensitive to glesatinib. In vivo models exhibiting METex14 del/A-loop double mutations and resistance to type I inhibitors exhibited a marked response to glesatinib. Finally, a METex14 del mutation-positive NSCLC patient who responded to crizotinib but later relapsed, demonstrated a mixed response to glesatinib including reduction in size of a MET Y1230H mutation-positive liver metastasis and concurrent loss of detection of this mutation in plasma DNA.Conclusions: Together, these data demonstrate that glesatinib exhibits a distinct mechanism of target inhibition and can overcome resistance to type I MET inhibitors. Clin Cancer Res; 23(21); 6661–72. ©2017 AACR.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7bf6bc9e9872b1b6f95da5a8da32f467