Dolman M Emmy M, Poon Evon, Ebus Marli E, den Hartog Ilona J M, van Noesel Carel J M, Jamin Yann, Hallsworth Albert, Robinson Simon P, Petrie Kevin, Sparidans Rolf W, Kok Robbert J, Versteeg Rogier, Caron Huib N, Chesler Louis, Molenaar Jan J
Department of Oncogenomics, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Division of Clinical Studies, The Institute of Cancer Research, London, England.
Clin Cancer Res. 2015 Nov 15;21(22):5100-9. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-15-0313. Epub 2015 Jul 22.
MYCN-dependent neuroblastomas have low cure rates with current multimodal treatment regimens and novel therapeutic drugs are therefore urgently needed. In previous preclinical studies, we have shown that targeted inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) resulted in specific killing of MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma cells. This study describes the in vivo preclinical evaluation of the CDK inhibitor AT7519.
Preclinical drug testing was performed using a panel of MYCN-amplified and MYCN single copy neuroblastoma cell lines and different MYCN-dependent mouse models of neuroblastoma.
AT7519 killed MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma cell lines more potently than MYCN single copy cell lines with a median LC50 value of 1.7 compared to 8.1 μmol/L (P = 0.0053) and a significantly stronger induction of apoptosis. Preclinical studies in female NMRI homozygous (nu/nu) mice with neuroblastoma patient-derived MYCN-amplified AMC711T xenografts revealed dose-dependent growth inhibition, which correlated with intratumoral AT7519 levels. CDK2 target inhibition by AT7519 was confirmed by significant reductions in levels of phosphorylated retinoblastoma (p-Rb) and nucleophosmin (p-NPM). AT7519 treatment of Th-MYCN transgenic mice resulted in improved survival and clinically significant tumor regression (average tumor size reduction of 86% at day 7 after treatment initiation). The improved efficacy of AT7519 observed in Th-MYCN mice correlated with higher tumor exposure to the drug.
This study strongly suggests that AT7519 is a promising drug for the treatment of high-risk neuroblastoma patients with MYCN amplification.
MYCN 依赖性神经母细胞瘤采用当前的多模式治疗方案治愈率较低,因此迫切需要新型治疗药物。在之前的临床前研究中,我们已经表明,靶向抑制细胞周期蛋白依赖性激酶 2(CDK2)可导致 MYCN 扩增的神经母细胞瘤细胞特异性死亡。本研究描述了 CDK 抑制剂 AT7519 的体内临床前评估。
使用一组 MYCN 扩增和 MYCN 单拷贝神经母细胞瘤细胞系以及不同的 MYCN 依赖性神经母细胞瘤小鼠模型进行临床前药物测试。
AT7519 对 MYCN 扩增的神经母细胞瘤细胞系的杀伤作用比 MYCN 单拷贝细胞系更强,中位半数致死浓度(LC50)值为 1.7 μmol/L,而 MYCN 单拷贝细胞系为 8.1 μmol/L(P = 0.0053),且诱导凋亡的作用明显更强。在患有神经母细胞瘤患者来源的 MYCN 扩增 AMC711T 异种移植瘤的雌性 NMRI 纯合(nu/nu)小鼠中进行的临床前研究显示出剂量依赖性生长抑制,这与肿瘤内 AT7519 水平相关。AT7519 对 CDK2 的靶向抑制通过磷酸化视网膜母细胞瘤(p-Rb)和核磷蛋白(p-NPM)水平的显著降低得到证实。用 AT7519 治疗 Th-MYCN 转基因小鼠可提高生存率并使肿瘤出现具有临床意义的消退(治疗开始后第 7 天平均肿瘤大小减少 86%)。在 Th-MYCN 小鼠中观察到的 AT7519 疗效改善与药物在肿瘤中的更高暴露相关。
本研究强烈表明,AT7519 是一种有前景的药物,可用于治疗 MYCN 扩增的高危神经母细胞瘤患者。