1. Academic Validation
  2. Volitinib, a potent and highly selective c-Met inhibitor, effectively blocks c-Met signaling and growth in c-MET amplified gastric cancer patient-derived tumor xenograft models

Volitinib, a potent and highly selective c-Met inhibitor, effectively blocks c-Met signaling and growth in c-MET amplified gastric cancer patient-derived tumor xenograft models

  • Mol Oncol. 2015 Jan;9(1):323-33. doi: 10.1016/j.molonc.2014.08.015.
Paul R Gavine 1 Yongxin Ren 2 Lu Han 3 Jing Lv 3 Shiming Fan 2 Wei Zhang 2 Wen Xu 2 Yuan Jie Liu 3 Tianwei Zhang 3 Haihua Fu 3 Yongjuan Yu 2 Huiying Wang 3 Shirlian Xu 3 Feng Zhou 2 Xinying Su 3 XiaoLu Yin 3 Liang Xie 3 Linfang Wang 2 Weiguo Qing 2 Longxian Jiao 2 Weiguo Su 2 Q May Wang 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 AstraZeneca, Asia & Emerging Markets iMed, AstraZeneca Global R&D, 199 LiangJing Road, ZhangJiang Hi-Tech Park, Shanghai, China. Electronic address: [email protected].
  • 2 Hutchison Medi Pharma Ltd, 720 Cai Lun Road, Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park, Shanghai, China.
  • 3 AstraZeneca, Asia & Emerging Markets iMed, AstraZeneca Global R&D, 199 LiangJing Road, ZhangJiang Hi-Tech Park, Shanghai, China.
Abstract

Purpose: To investigate the incidence of cMET gene copy number changes and protein overexpression in Chinese gastric Cancer (GC) and to preclinically test the hypothesis that the novel, potent and selective cMET small-molecule inhibitor volitinib, will deliver potent anti-tumor activity in cMET-dysregulated GC patient-derived tumor xenograft (PDX) models.

Experimental design: A range of assays were used and included; in vitro cell line panel screening and pharmacodynamic (PD) analysis, cMET fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) and immunohistochemical (IHC) tissue microarray (TMA) analysis of Chinese GC (n = 170), and anti-tumor efficacy testing and PD analysis of gastric PDX models using volitinib.

Results: The incidence of cMET gene amplification and protein overexpression within Chinese patient GC tumors was 6% and 13%, respectively. Volitinib displayed a highly selective profile across a gastric cell line panel, potently inhibiting cell growth only in those lines with dysregulated cMET (EC50 values 0.6 nM/L-12.5 nM/L). Volitinib treatment led to pharmacodynamic modulation of cMET signaling and potent tumor stasis in 3/3 cMET-dysregulated GC PDX models, but had negligible activity in a GC control model.

Conclusions: This study provides an assessment of tumor cMET gene copy number changes and protein overexpression incidence in a cohort of Chinese GC patients. To our knowledge, this is the first study to demonstrate anti-tumor efficacy in a panel of cMET-dysregulated gastric Cancer PDX models, using a novel selective cMET-inhibitor (volitinib). Thus, the translational science presented here provides strong rationale for the investigation of volitinib as a therapeutic option for patients with GC tumors harboring amplified cMET.

Keywords

Gastric cancer; PDX; Small molecule; Tyrosine kinase inhibitor; Volitinib; cMET.

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