Efficacy of intermittent combined RAF and MEK inhibition in a patient with concurrent BRAF- and NRAS-mutant malignancies Journal Article


Authors: Abdel-Wahab, O.; Klimek, V. M.; Gaskell, A. A.; Viale, A.; Cheng, D.; Kim, E.; Rampal, R.; Bluth, M.; Harding, J. J.; Callahan, M. K.; Merghoub, T.; Berger, M. F.; Solit, D. B.; Rosen, N.; Levine, R. L.; Chapman, P. B.
Article Title: Efficacy of intermittent combined RAF and MEK inhibition in a patient with concurrent BRAF- and NRAS-mutant malignancies
Abstract: Vemurafenib, a RAF inhibitor, extends survival in patients with BRAFV600-mutant melanoma but activates extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signaling in RAS-mutant cells. In a patient with a BRAFV600K-mutant melanoma responding to vemurafenib, we observed accelerated progression of a previously unrecognized NRAS-mutant leukemia. We hypothesized that combining vemurafenib with a MAP-ERK kinase (MEK) inhibitor would inhibit ERK activation in the melanoma and prevent ERK activation by vemurafenib in the leukemia, and thus suppress both malignancies. We demonstrate that intermittent administration of vemurafenib led to a near-complete remission of the melanoma, and the addition of the MEK inhibitor cobimetinib (GDC-0973) caused suppression of vemurafenib-induced leukemic proliferation and ERK activation. Antimelanoma and antileukemia responses have been maintained for nearly 20 months, as documented by serial measurements of tumor-derived DNA in plasma in addition to conventional radiographic and clinical assessments of response. These data support testing of intermittent ERK pathway inhibition in the therapy for both RAS-mutant leukemia and BRAF-mutant melanoma. Significance: We show that in a patient with simultaneous RAS-mutant leukemia and BRAF-mutant melanoma, intermittent RAF inhibitor therapy induced a near-complete melanoma response, and addition of a MEK inhibitor prevented RAF inhibitor-induced activation of the RAS-mutant leukemia. Intermittent therapy may permit greater pathway inhibition with less toxicity, avoid chronic relief of pathway feedback, and have enhanced effectiveness compared with chronic administration. © 2014 American Association for Cancer Research.
Journal Title: Cancer Discovery
Volume: 4
Issue: 5
ISSN: 2159-8274
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2014-05-01
Start Page: 538
End Page: 545
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.cd-13-1038
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 24589925
PMCID: PMC4850735
DOI/URL:
Notes: Cancer Discov. -- Cited By (since 1996):2 -- Export Date: 2 June 2014 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Neal Rosen
    425 Rosen
  2. Taha Merghoub
    364 Merghoub
  3. David Solit
    779 Solit
  4. James Joseph Harding
    250 Harding
  5. Mark J Bluth
    13 Bluth
  6. Raajit Kumar Rampal
    338 Rampal
  7. Paul Chapman
    326 Chapman
  8. Ross Levine
    776 Levine
  9. Margaret Kathleen Callahan
    197 Callahan
  10. Agnes Viale
    245 Viale
  11. Michael Forman Berger
    765 Berger
  12. Donavan Tai Suan Cheng
    52 Cheng
  13. Eunhee Kim
    29 Kim