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Antitumor activity in RAS-driven tumors by blocking AKT and MEK.
PURPOSE: KRAS is the most commonly mutated oncogene in human tumors. KRAS-mutant cells may exhibit resistance to the allosteric MEK1/2 inhibitor selumetinib (AZD6244; ARRY-142886) and allosteric AKT inhibitors (such as MK-2206), the combination of which may overcome resistance to both monotherapies. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We conducted a dose/schedule-finding study evaluating MK-2206 and selumetinib in patients with advanced treatment-refractory solid tumors. Recommended dosing schedules were defined as MK-2206 at 135 mg weekly and selumetinib at 100 mg once daily. RESULTS: Grade 3 rash was the most common dose-limiting toxicity (DLT); other DLTs included grade 4 lipase increase, grade 3 stomatitis, diarrhea, and fatigue, and grade 3 and grade 2 retinal pigment epithelium detachment. There were no meaningful pharmacokinetic drug-drug interactions. Clinical antitumor activity included RECIST 1.0-confirmed partial responses in non-small cell lung cancer and low-grade ovarian carcinoma. CONCLUSION: Responses in KRAS-mutant cancers were generally durable. Clinical cotargeting of MEK and AKT signaling may be an important therapeutic strategy in KRAS-driven human malignancies (Trial NCT number NCT01021748).The Drug Development Unit of the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust
and The Institute of Cancer Research is supported in part by a programme grant from Cancer
Research UK (grant number: C347/A18077). Support was also provided by an Experimental
Cancer Medicine Centre grant (no grant number) and the National Institute for Health Research
Biomedical Research Centre (jointly to the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust and The
Institute of Cancer Research) (grant numbers: A46/CCR - CCR4057 & CCR4058).This is the accepted manuscript of a paper published in Clinical Cancer Research, February 15, 2015 21; 739, doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-14-190