NVL-655 is a selective and brain-penetrant inhibitor of diverse ALK-mutant oncoproteins, including lorlatinib-resistant compound mutations Journal Article


Authors: Lin, J. J.; Horan, J. C.; Tangpeerachaikul, A.; Swalduz, A.; Valdivia, A.; Johnson, M. L.; Besse, B.; Camidge, D. R.; Fujino, T.; Yoda, S.; Nguyen-Phuong, L.; Mizuta, H.; Bigot, L.; Nobre, C.; Lee, J. B.; Yu, M. R.; Mente, S.; Sun, Y.; Kohl, N. E.; Porter, J. R.; Shair, M. D.; Zhu, V. W.; Felip, E.; Cho, B. C.; Friboulet, L.; Hata, A. N.; Pelish, H. E.; Drilon, A.
Article Title: NVL-655 is a selective and brain-penetrant inhibitor of diverse ALK-mutant oncoproteins, including lorlatinib-resistant compound mutations
Abstract: Three generations of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) have been approved for anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) fusion-positive non-small cell lung cancer. However, none address the combined need for broad resistance coverage, brain activity, and avoidance of clinically dose-limiting TRK inhibition. NVL-655 is a rationally designed TKI with >50-fold selectivity for ALK over 96% of the kinome tested. In vitro, NVL-655 inhibits diverse ALK fusions, activating alterations, and resistance mutations, showing >= 100-fold improved potency against ALKG1202R single and compound mutations over approved ALK TKIs. In vivo, it induces regression across 12 tumor models, including intracranial and patient-derived xenografts. NVL-655 inhibits ALK over TRK with 22-fold to >874-fold selectivity. These preclinical findings are supported by three case studies from an ongoing first-in-human phase I/II trial of NVL-655 which demonstrate preliminary proof-of-concept clinical activity in heavily pretreated patients with ALK fusion-positive non-small cell lung cancer, including in patients with brain metastases and single or compound ALK resistance mutations. Significance: By combining broad activity against single and compound ALK resistance mutations, brain penetrance, and selectivity, NVL-655 addresses key limitations of currently approved ALK inhibitors and has the potential to represent a distinct advancement as a fourth-generation inhibitor for patients with ALK-driven cancers.
Keywords: protein; identification; cell lung-cancer; cns; open-label; crizotinib; eml4-alk fusion; alectinib; single-arm; lymphoma kinase alk
Journal Title: Cancer Discovery
Volume: 14
Issue: 12
ISSN: 2159-8274
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2024-12-01
Start Page: 2367
End Page: 2386
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:001368753200018
DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.Cd-24-0231
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC11609626
PUBMED: 39269178
Notes: The MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) is acknowledge in the PDF -- Corresponding authors is MSK author: Alexander Drilon -- Source: Wos
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  1. Alexander Edward Drilon
    632 Drilon