Gollner Andreas, Rudolph Dorothea, Weyer-Czernilofsky Ulrike, Baumgartinger Rosa, Jung Peter, Weinstabl Harald, Ramharter Jürgen, Grempler Rolf, Quant Jens, Rinnenthal Jörg, Pérez Pitarch Alejandro, Golubovic Bojana, Gerlach Daniel, Bader Gerd, Wetzel Kristiane, Otto Sebastian, Mandl Christian, Boehmelt Guido, McConnell Darryl B, Kraut Norbert, Sini Patrizia
Boehringer Ingelheim RCV GmbH & Co. KG, Vienna, Austria.
Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Ridgefield, Connecticut.
Mol Cancer Ther. 2024 Dec 3;23(12):1689-1702. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-23-0783.
p53 is known as the guardian of the genome and is one of the most important tumor suppressors. It is inactivated in most tumors, either via tumor protein p53 (TP53) gene mutation or copy number amplification of key negative regulators, e.g., mouse double minute 2 (MDM2). Compounds that bind to the MDM2 protein and disrupt its interaction with p53 restore p53 tumor suppressor activity, thereby promoting cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. Previous clinical experience with MDM2-p53 protein-protein interaction antagonists (MDM2-p53 antagonists) has demonstrated that thrombocytopenia and neutropenia represent on-target dose-limiting toxicities that might restrict their therapeutic utility. Dosing less frequently, while maintaining efficacious exposure, represents an approach to mitigate toxicity and improve the therapeutic window of MDM2-p53 antagonists. However, to achieve this, a molecule possessing excellent potency and ideal pharmacokinetic properties is required. Here, we present the discovery and characterization of brigimadlin (BI 907828), a novel, investigational spiro-oxindole MDM2-p53 antagonist. Brigimadlin exhibited high bioavailability and exposure, as well as dose-linear pharmacokinetics in preclinical models. Brigimadlin treatment restored p53 activity and led to apoptosis induction in preclinical models of TP53 wild-type, MDM2-amplified cancer. Oral administration of brigimadlin in an intermittent dosing schedule induced potent tumor growth inhibition in several TP53 wild-type, MDM2-amplified xenograft models. Exploratory clinical pharmacokinetic studies (NCT03449381) showed high systemic exposure and a long plasma elimination half-life in patients with cancer who received oral brigimadlin. These findings support the continued clinical evaluation of brigimadlin in patients with MDM2-amplified cancers, such as dedifferentiated liposarcoma.
p53被称为基因组守护者,是最重要的肿瘤抑制因子之一。在大多数肿瘤中,它会通过肿瘤蛋白p53(TP53)基因突变或关键负调控因子(如小鼠双微体2,MDM2)的拷贝数扩增而失活。与MDM2蛋白结合并破坏其与p53相互作用的化合物可恢复p53肿瘤抑制活性,从而促进细胞周期停滞和凋亡。以往使用MDM2-p53蛋白-蛋白相互作用拮抗剂(MDM2-p53拮抗剂)的临床经验表明,血小板减少和中性粒细胞减少是剂量限制性毒性反应,可能会限制其治疗效用。在维持有效暴露的同时减少给药频率是减轻毒性和改善MDM2-p53拮抗剂治疗窗的一种方法。然而,要实现这一点,需要一种具有优异效力和理想药代动力学特性的分子。在此,我们介绍了新型研究性螺环氧化吲哚MDM2-p53拮抗剂brigimadlin(BI 907828)的发现与特性。在临床前模型中,brigimadlin表现出高生物利用度和暴露量,以及剂量线性药代动力学。在TP53野生型、MDM2扩增的癌症临床前模型中,brigimadlin治疗可恢复p53活性并诱导凋亡。在多个TP53野生型、MDM2扩增的异种移植模型中,以间歇给药方案口服brigimadlin可有效抑制肿瘤生长。探索性临床药代动力学研究(NCT03449381)表明,接受口服brigimadlin的癌症患者具有高全身暴露量和长血浆消除半衰期。这些发现支持继续对brigimadlin在MDM2扩增癌症患者(如去分化脂肪肉瘤)中进行临床评估。