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Data from Aurora Kinase A Inhibition Provides Clinical Benefit, Normalizes Megakaryocytes, and Reduces Bone Marrow Fibrosis in Patients with Myelofibrosis: A Phase I Trial

Authors :
John D. Crispino
Brady Stein
Ayalew Tefferi
Francis J. Giles
Raajit K. Rampal
Peng Ji
Juehua Gao
Amber Thomassen
Dalissa Tejera
Juan Carlos Nobrega
Shradha Patel
Kristen Englund Prahl
Yvonne Trang Dinh
Aref Al-kali
Mrinal M. Patnaik
Darci Zblewski
Amy Handlogten
Amy Graf
Stephanie Barath
Rangit R. Vallapureddy
Roberto Tapia
Akshar Patel
Christopher A. Famulare
Noushin Farnoud
Qiang Jeremy Wen
Jessica K. Altman
Olga Frankfurt
Angela J. Fought
Alfred Rademaker
Sandeep Gurbuxani
Justin M. Watts
Ronan Swords
Christian Marinaccio
Naseema Gangat
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose:Myelofibrosis is characterized by bone marrow fibrosis, atypical megakaryocytes, splenomegaly, constitutional symptoms, thrombotic and hemorrhagic complications, and a risk of evolution to acute leukemia. The JAK kinase inhibitor ruxolitinib provides therapeutic benefit, but the effects are limited. The purpose of this study was to determine whether targeting AURKA, which has been shown to increase maturation of atypical megakaryocytes, has potential benefit for patients with myelofibrosis.Patients and Methods:Twenty-four patients with myelofibrosis were enrolled in a phase I study at three centers. The objective of the study was to evaluate the safety and preliminary efficacy of alisertib. Correlative studies involved assessment of the effect of alisertib on the megakaryocyte lineage, allele burden, and fibrosis.Results:In addition to being well tolerated, alisertib reduced splenomegaly and symptom burden in 29% and 32% of patients, respectively, despite not consistently reducing the degree of inflammatory cytokines. Moreover, alisertib normalized megakaryocytes and reduced fibrosis in 5 of 7 patients for whom sequential marrows were available. Alisertib also decreased the mutant allele burden in a subset of patients.Conclusions:Given the limitations of ruxolitinib, novel therapies are needed for myelofibrosis. In this study, alisertib provided clinical benefit and exhibited the expected on-target effect on the megakaryocyte lineage, resulting in normalization of these cells and reduced fibrosis in the majority of patients for which sequential marrows were available. Thus, AURKA inhibition should be further developed as a therapeutic option in myelofibrosis.See related commentary by Piszczatowski and Steidl, p. 4868

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f31fe04797344d8ed5073933fa0fad97
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.c.6528942.v1