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SAR439859, a Novel Selective Estrogen Receptor Degrader (SERD), Demonstrates Effective and Broad Antitumor Activity in Wild-Type and Mutant ER-Positive Breast Cancer Models

Authors :
Youssef El-Ahmad
Hong Cheng
Fabienne Thompson
Monsif Bouaboula
Jack Pollard
Gary Mccort
Andrew Hebert
Carlos Garcia-Echeverria
Michel Tabart
Fangxian Sun
Laurent Schio
Joon Sang Lee
Dinesh S. Bangari
Jane Cheng
Laurent Besret
Hui Cao
Dietmar Hoffmann
Maysoun Shomali
Rosalia Arrebola
Zhuyan Guo
Anne Caron
Laurent Debussche
Frank Halley
Bruno Filoche-Romme
Albane Courjaud
Mikhail Levit
Malvika Koundinya
Jessica McManus
Victor Certal
Pierre-Yves Abecassis
Source :
Molecular cancer therapeutics. 20(2)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Primary treatment for estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer is endocrine therapy. However, substantial evidence indicates a continued role for ER signaling in tumor progression. Selective estrogen receptor degraders (SERD), such as fulvestrant, induce effective ER signaling inhibition, although clinical studies with fulvestrant report insufficient blockade of ER signaling, possibly due to suboptimal pharmaceutical properties. Furthermore, activating mutations in the ER have emerged as a resistance mechanism to current endocrine therapies. New oral SERDs with improved drug properties are under clinical investigation, but the biological profile that could translate to improved therapeutic benefit remains unclear. Here, we describe the discovery of SAR439859, a novel, orally bioavailable SERD with potent antagonist and degradation activities against both wild-type and mutant Y537S ER. Driven by its fluoropropyl pyrrolidinyl side chain, SAR439859 has demonstrated broader and superior ER antagonist and degrader activities across a large panel of ER+ cells, compared with other SERDs characterized by a cinnamic acid side chain, including improved inhibition of ER signaling and tumor cell growth. Similarly, in vivo treatment with SAR439859 demonstrated significant tumor regression in ER+ breast cancer models, including MCF7-ESR1 wild-type and mutant-Y537S mouse tumors, and HCI013, a patient-derived tamoxifen-resistant xenograft tumor. These findings indicate that SAR439859 may provide therapeutic benefit to patients with ER+ breast cancer, including those who have resistance to endocrine therapy with both wild-type and mutant ER.

Details

ISSN :
15388514
Volume :
20
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular cancer therapeutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9a793f8b26300e48375f0775740c17d0