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  2. Preclinical pharmacology of AZD5363, an inhibitor of AKT: pharmacodynamics, antitumor activity, and correlation of monotherapy activity with genetic background

Preclinical pharmacology of AZD5363, an inhibitor of AKT: pharmacodynamics, antitumor activity, and correlation of monotherapy activity with genetic background

  • Mol Cancer Ther. 2012 Apr;11(4):873-87. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-11-0824-T.
Barry R Davies 1 Hannah Greenwood Phillippa Dudley Claire Crafter De-Hua Yu Jingchuan Zhang Jing Li Beirong Gao Qunsheng Ji Juliana Maynard Sally-Ann Ricketts Darren Cross Sabina Cosulich Christine C Chresta Ken Page James Yates Clare Lane Rebecca Watson Richard Luke Donald Ogilvie Martin Pass
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Abstract

Akt is a key node in the most frequently deregulated signaling network in human Cancer. AZD5363, a novel pyrrolopyrimidine-derived compound, inhibited all Akt isoforms with a potency of 10 nmol/L or less and inhibited phosphorylation of Akt substrates in cells with a potency of approximately 0.3 to 0.8 μmol/L. AZD5363 monotherapy inhibited the proliferation of 41 of 182 solid and hematologic tumor cell lines with a potency of 3 μmol/L or less. Cell lines derived from breast cancers showed the highest frequency of sensitivity. There was a significant relationship between the presence of PIK3CA and/or PTEN mutations and sensitivity to AZD5363 and between Ras mutations and resistance. Oral dosing of AZD5363 to nude mice caused dose- and time-dependent reduction of PRAS40, GSK3β, and S6 phosphorylation in BT474c xenografts (PRAS40 phosphorylation EC(50) ~ 0.1 μmol/L total plasma exposure), reversible increases in blood glucose concentrations, and dose-dependent decreases in 2[18F]fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose ((18)F-FDG) uptake in U87-MG xenografts. Chronic oral dosing of AZD5363 caused dose-dependent growth inhibition of xenografts derived from various tumor types, including HER2(+) breast Cancer models that are resistant to trastuzumab. AZD5363 also significantly enhanced the antitumor activity of docetaxel, lapatinib, and trastuzumab in breast Cancer xenografts. It is concluded that AZD5363 is a potent inhibitor of Akt with pharmacodynamic activity in vivo, has potential to treat a range of solid and hematologic tumors as monotherapy or a combinatorial agent, and has potential for personalized medicine based on the genetic status of PIK3CA, PTEN, and Ras. AZD5363 is currently in phase I clinical trials.

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