scholarly journals DDIS-29. BRAIN-PENETRANT MICROTUBULE-TARGETING AGENT, ST-401, KILLS GLIOBLASTOMA THROUGH A NOVEL MECHANISM

2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi69-vi69
Author(s):  
Eric Horne ◽  
Cong Xu ◽  
Juan-Jesus Vicente ◽  
P J Cimino ◽  
Michael Wagenbach ◽  
...  

Abstract Glioblastomas are particularly sensitive to mitotic disruption when compared with nonmalignant cells and thus microtubule-targeting agents (MTA) represent promising therapeutics to treat patients with glioblastomas; but few such compounds pass the blood brain barrier. We developed a series of modified carbazoles, evaluated their anti-cancer activity in glioblastoma cells in culture and identified ST-401 as the most potent compound (IC50, 10 – 102 nM, depending on the cell line). Testing of ST-401 on the NCI 60 cancer cell panel indicated that its anti-tumor activity does not correlate with any of the compounds tested thus far through this platform but showed weak correlations for taxol (p=0.46) and vinblastine (p=0.34). Thus, ST-401 may kill cancer cells through a novel mechanism related to disruption of MT function. Biochemical analysis indicates that ST-401 binds to the colchicine site of tubulin and inhibits tubulin assembly. Real-time imaging of MT dynamics in cells in culture shows that ST-401 reduces MT assembly rates but in a reversible fashion. ST-401 potently blocks mitotic progression and triggers cell death in multiple glioblastoma lines in culture, including patient-derived glioblastomas of the proneural, mesenchymal and classical subtypes. We established the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of ST-401 in mice (20 mg/kg/bdip) and found that its acute i.p. injection results in micromolar amounts of ST-401 in mouse brain. Using this treatment regimen, we found that ST-401 reduces tumor growth and doubles overall survival in a human tumor xenograft mouse model system. ST-401 also increases by 2-fold overall survival in the genetic RCAS-PDGF glioblastomas mouse model treated with standard care (radiation and Temodar® treatments). Histological analysis of RCAS-PDGF glioblastoma tissue shows that ST-401 triggers mitotic arrest of glioblastoma cells. ST-401 represents a promising lead compound for the treatments for patients diagnosed with glioblastomas.

2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maximilian Neidhardt ◽  
Nils Gessert ◽  
Tobias Gosau ◽  
Julia Kemmling ◽  
Susanne Feldhaus ◽  
...  

AbstractMinimally invasive robotic surgery offer benefits such as reduced physical trauma, faster recovery and lesser pain for the patient. For these procedures, visual and haptic feedback to the surgeon is crucial when operating surgical tools without line-of-sight with a robot. External force sensors are biased by friction at the tool shaft and thereby cannot estimate forces between tool tip and tissue. As an alternative, vision-based force estimation was proposed. Here, interaction forces are directly learned from deformation observed by an external imaging system. Recently, an approach based on optical coherence tomography and deep learning has shown promising results. However, most experiments are performed on ex-vivo tissue. In this work, we demonstrate that models trained on dead tissue do not perform well in in vivo data. We performed multiple experiments on a human tumor xenograft mouse model, both on in vivo, perfused tissue and dead tissue. We compared two deep learning models in different training scenarios. Training on perfused, in vivo data improved model performance by 24% for in vivo force estimation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. TPS4164-TPS4164
Author(s):  
Jon Holmlund ◽  
Melissa Brookes ◽  
Lauren Elizabeth Colbert ◽  
Shalini Moningi ◽  
Manoop S. Bhutani ◽  
...  

TPS4164 Background: Local progression causes up to 30% of deaths from pancreatic cancer (PC) and is also a significant source of morbidity. Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) offers the potential for improved therapeutic index over standard fractionation, but current regimens of 5-7 Gy/fraction x 5 are constrained by nearby organ tolerance and offer only palliation without improving survival. Safe dose escalation is necessary to improve SBRT efficacy. GC4419, a superoxide dismutase mimetic, selectively converts superoxide (O2•-) to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and oxygen. O2•-initiates normal tissue damage due to RT. GC4419 is in a Phase 3 trial (NCT03689712) to reduce RT-induced oral mucositis in head and neck cancer, based on positive results in a randomized Phase 2 trial for that indication (Anderson, ASCO 2018). GC4419 improved the survival of mice receiving 8.5 Gy x 5 to the upper abdomen. Cancer cells are less tolerant to elevated H2O2, and more tolerant to elevated O2•-, than normal cells, and GC4419 demonstrated mechanism-dependent synergy with high dose-fraction RT in a human tumor xenograft with inducible expression of catalase (Sishc, AACR 2018). Thus, adding GC4419 to SBRT may increase both the efficacy and the safety of the latter. Methods: 48 patients with localized, unresectable PC without frank duodenal invasion, who have received 3+ cycles of induction chemotherapy, are to be randomized 1:1 to placebo or GC4419, 90 mg IV, prior to each of 5 consecutive daily (M-F) SBRT fractions. A phase I/II Late Onset Efficacy/ Toxicity tradeoff (LO-ET) based adaptive design adaptive model drives SBRT dose escalation in each arm based on a dual endpoint (Gr 3-4 GI toxicity or death ;stable disease or better) by 90 days post SBRT. The planned dose levels are 10, 11 and 12Gy x 5 fractions (BED10=100,112.5 and 132Gy, respectively) as an integrated boost to the gross tumor volume (GTV). Primary endpoint: Maximum tolerated dose of SBRT with GC4419 or placebo. Exploratory endpoints include change in tumor radiographic resectability, correlative studies (ctDNA, exosomal DNA, tumor exome/transcriptome sequencing, immune profiling). Supported by Galera Therapeutics, Inc. Clinical trial information: NCT03340974.


ChemInform ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 34 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander L. Ruchelman ◽  
Sudhir K. Singh ◽  
Xiaohua Wu ◽  
Abhijit Ray ◽  
Jin-Ming Yang ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 32-33
Author(s):  
Eliana B. Gomez ◽  
Wenjuan Wu ◽  
Jennifer R Stephens ◽  
Mary S. Rosendahl ◽  
Barbara J. Brandhuber

Introduction: Bruton's Tyrosine Kinase (BTK) is an essential component of normal and malignant B-cell receptor signaling. Covalent BTK inhibitors have transformed the treatment of B-cell malignancies. Despite the marked efficacy of covalent BTKi, treatment failure can occur through the development of resistance and discontinuation for adverse events. The activity of these covalent BTK inhibitors are markedly reduced or absent in the presence of BTK cysteine binding site (C481) mutations. Moreover, these agents share pharmacologic liabilities (e.g. low oral bioavailability, short half-life) that may sometimes lead to suboptimal BTK target coverage, for example in rapidly proliferating tumors with high BTK protein turnover, ultimately manifesting as acquired resistance for some patients. To address these limitations, LOXO-305, a highly selective, non-covalent BTKi that inhibits both WT and C481-mutated BTK with equal low nM potency was developed. Proof-of-concept Phase I results demonstrated LOXO-305's anti-tumor activity across patients with heavily pretreated B-cell malignancies (Mato et al. ASH 2019). We previously showed pre-clinical data demonstrating that LOXO-305 potently inhibited wild-type (WT) BTK and different variants of the BTK mutation C481 with nanomolar potency and caused regression in BTK-dependent lymphoma mouse xenograft models (Brandhuber et al. SOHO 2018, and Gomez et al. ASH 2019). Here we describe the activity of LOXO-305 alone or in combination with venetoclax (BCL-2 inhibitor), in TMD8 BTK WT and TMD8 BTK C481S human tumor xenograft models of diffuse large B lymphoma and a REC-1 human tumor xenograft model of mantle cell lymphoma in mice. We also report the activity of LOXO-305 alone and in combination with R-CHOP (rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin hydrochloride, vincristine sulfate, and prednisone) or obinutuzumab (anti-CD20 antibody), in the TMD8 xenograft tumor model. Methods: In all studies, tested articles were administered alone and in combination, following different dosing regimens. Table 1 shows the tested compound(s), dosing frequency, cell line used, disease, BTK status (WT or C481S), and mouse strain used, for each study presented in this abstract. Human TMD8 BTK WT, TMD8 BTK C481S or REC-1 cells were injected subcutaneously in the right flank of mice. When tumors reached a mean volume between 150 mm3 and 400 mm3, mice were randomized based on their tumor volumes. Mice were next dosed for 17 to 23 days depending on the study design. The potencies of the compounds stand-alone or in combination on the inhibition of the tumor growth were assessed based on the tumor volume changes and weights after collection at the end of the study. Additionally, in the TMD8 studies, the plasma concentrations of tested articles were measured at multiple time points after the last dose. Results: All treatments were well tolerated without any significant body weight loss or clinical signs being observed on the mice. LOXO-305 potently inhibited the growth of BTK WT and BTK C481S driven xenograft tumors. In all combinations tested, significantly greater tumor growth inhibition was observed in groups where LOXO-305 was co-administered with clinically approved agents. Conclusion: These data suggest that the co-administration of LOXO-305 with venetoclax, R-CHOP or obinutuzumab could have an increased benefit for patients with B-cell malignancies compared to stand-alone treatments and warrants further investigation. Disclosures Gomez: Loxo Oncology, Inc, a wholly owned subsidiary of Eli Lilly and Company: Current Employment, Divested equity in a private or publicly-traded company in the past 24 months. Wu:Eli Lilly and Company: Current Employment, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company. Stephens:Eli Lilly and Company: Current Employment, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company. Rosendahl:Loxo Oncology, Inc, a wholly owned subsidiary of Eli Lilly and Company: Current Employment, Divested equity in a private or publicly-traded company in the past 24 months. Brandhuber:Loxo Oncology, Inc, a wholly owned subsidiary of Eli Lilly and Company: Current Employment, Divested equity in a private or publicly-traded company in the past 24 months.


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