A next-generation TRK kinase inhibitor overcomes acquired resistance to prior TRK kinase inhibition in patients with TRK fusion-positive solid tumors Journal Article


Authors: Drilon, A.; Nagasubramanian, R.; Blake, J. F.; Ku, N.; Tuch, B. B.; Ebata, K.; Smith, S.; Lauriault, V.; Kolakowski, G. R.; Brandhuber, B. J.; Larsen, P. D.; Bouhana, K. S.; Winski, S. L.; Hamor, R.; Wu, W. I.; Parker, A.; Morales, T. H.; Sullivan, F. X.; DeWolf, W. E.; Wollenberg, L. A.; Gordon, P. R.; Douglas-Lindsay, D. N.; Scaltriti, M.; Benayed, R.; Raj, S.; Hanusch, B.; Schram, A. M.; Jonsson, P.; Berger, M. F.; Hechtman, J. F.; Taylor, B. S.; Andrews, S.; Rothenberg, S. M.; Hyman, D. M.
Article Title: A next-generation TRK kinase inhibitor overcomes acquired resistance to prior TRK kinase inhibition in patients with TRK fusion-positive solid tumors
Abstract: Larotrectinib, a selective TRK tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), has demonstrated histology-agnostic efficacy in patients with TRK fusion-positive cancers. Although responses to TRK inhibition can be dramatic and durable, duration of response may eventually be limited by acquired resistance. LOXO-195 is a selective TRK TKI designed to overcome acquired resistance mediated by recurrent kinase domain (solvent front and xDFG) mutations identified in multiple patients who have developed resistance to TRK TKIs. Activity against these acquired mutations was confirmed in enzyme and cell-based assays and in vivo tumor models. As clinical proof of concept, the first 2 patients with TRK fusion-positive cancers who developed acquired resistance mutations on larotrectinib were treated with LOXO-195 on a first-in-human basis, utilizing rapid dose titration guided by pharmacokinetic assessments. This approach led to rapid tumor responses and extended the overall duration of disease control achieved with TRK inhibition in both patients. Significance: LOXO-195 abrogated resistance in TRK fusion-positive cancers that acquired kinase domain mutations, a shared liability with all existing TRK TKIs. This establishes a role for sequential treatment by demonstrating continued TRK dependence and validates a paradigm for the accelerated development of next-generation inhibitors against validated oncogenic targets. © 2017 American Association for Cancer Research.
Journal Title: Cancer Discovery
Volume: 7
Issue: 9
ISSN: 2159-8274
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2017-09-01
Start Page: 963
End Page: 972
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.cd-17-0507
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC5581710
PUBMED: 28578312
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 October 2017 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. David Hyman
    354 Hyman
  2. Michael Forman Berger
    765 Berger
  3. Alexander Edward Drilon
    632 Drilon
  4. Barry Stephen Taylor
    238 Taylor
  5. Alison Michele Schram
    122 Schram
  6. Maurizio Scaltriti
    169 Scaltriti
  7. Jaclyn Frances Hechtman
    212 Hechtman
  8. Rym Benayed
    188 Benayed
  9. Karl Philip Jonsson
    50 Jonsson
  10. Sandeep Sunder Raj
    19 Raj