1. Mouse PDX Trial Suggests Synergy of Concurrent Inhibition of RAF and EGFR in Colorectal Cancer with BRAF or KRAS Mutations
- Author
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Amit Aggarwal, Gregory P. Donoho, Gregory D. Plowman, Ramon V. Tiu, Robert D. Van Horn, Sheng Bin Peng, Youyan Zhang, Jason C. Ting, Ruslan D. Novosiadly, Yue Webster, Yung Mae M. Yao, Amelie Forest, Philip W. Iversen, Henry James Robert, Philip J. Ebert, and Steven M. Bray
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,MAPK/ERK pathway ,Cancer Research ,endocrine system diseases ,Combination therapy ,Colorectal cancer ,medicine.disease_cause ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pharmacotherapy ,medicine ,neoplasms ,Survival rate ,Cetuximab ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,Cell culture ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,Cancer research ,KRAS ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the antitumor efficacy of cetuximab in combination with LSN3074753, an analog of LY3009120 and pan-RAF inhibitor in 79 colorectal cancer patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models. Experimental Design: Seventy-nine well-characterized colorectal cancer PDX models were employed to conduct a single mouse per treatment group (n = 1) trial. Results: Consistent with clinical results, cetuximab was efficacious in wild-type KRAS and BRAF PDX models, with an overall response rate of 6.3% and disease control rate (DCR) of 20.3%. LSN3074753 was active in a small subset of PDX models that harbored KRAS or BRAF mutations. However, the combination treatment displayed the enhanced antitumor activity with DCR of 35.4%. Statistical analysis revealed that BRAF and KRAS mutations were the best predictors of the combinatorial activity and were significantly associated with synergistic effect with a P value of 0.01 compared with cetuximab alone. In 12 models with BRAF mutations, the combination therapy resulted in a DCR of 41.7%, whereas either monotherapy had a DCR of 8.3%. Among 44 KRAS mutation models, cetuximab or LSN3074753 monotherapy resulted in a DCR of 13.6% or 11.4%, respectively, and the combination therapy increased DCR to 34.1%. Molecular analysis suggests that EGFR activation is a potential feedback and resistant mechanism of pan-RAF inhibition. Conclusions: MAPK and EGFR pathway activations are two major molecular hallmarks of colorectal cancer. This mouse PDX trial recapitulated clinical results of cetuximab. Concurrent EGFR and RAF inhibition demonstrated synergistic antitumor activity for colorectal cancer PDX models with a KRAS or BRAF mutation. Clin Cancer Res; 23(18); 5547–60. ©2017 AACR.
- Published
- 2017