8 research outputs found
Discovery of an Orally Efficacious Inhibitor of Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase
Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) is a promising therapeutic
target for the treatment of cancer, supported by considerable favorable
preclinical and clinical activities over the past several years and
culminating in the recent FDA approval of the ALK inhibitor crizotinib.
Through a series of targeted modifications on an ALK inhibitor diaminopyrimidine
scaffold, our research group has driven improvements in ALK potency,
kinase selectivity, and overall pharmaceutical properties. Optimization
of this scaffold has led to the identification of a potent and efficacious
inhibitor of ALK, <b>25b</b>. A striking feature of <b>25b</b> over previously described ALK inhibitors is its >600-fold selectivity
over insulin receptor (IR), a closely related kinase family member.
Most importantly, <b>25b</b> exhibited dose proportional escalation
in rat compared to compound <b>3</b> which suffered dose limiting
absorption preventing further advancement. Compound <b>25b</b> exhibited significant in vivo antitumor
efficacy when dosed orally in an ALK-positive ALCL tumor xenograft
model in SCID mice, warranting further assessment in advanced preclinical
models
Strategies to Mitigate the Bioactivation of 2-Anilino-7-Aryl-Pyrrolo[2,1-<i>f</i>][1,2,4]triazines: Identification of Orally Bioavailable, Efficacious ALK Inhibitors
Chemical strategies to mitigate cytochrome P450-mediated
bioactivation of novel 2,7-disubstituted pyrroloÂ[2,1-<i>f</i>]Â[1,2,4]Âtriazine ALK inhibitors are described along with synthesis
and biological activity. Piperidine-derived analogues showing minimal
microsomal reactive metabolite formation were discovered. Potent,
selective, and metabolically stable ALK inhibitors from this class
were identified, and an orally bioavailable compound (<b>32</b>) with antitumor efficacy in ALK-driven xenografts in mouse models
was extensively characterized
Discovery of Clinical Candidate CEP-37440, a Selective Inhibitor of Focal Adhesion Kinase (FAK) and Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (ALK)
Analogues structurally related to
anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)
inhibitor <b>1</b> were optimized for metabolic stability. The
results from this endeavor not only led to improved metabolic stability,
pharmacokinetic parameters, and in vitro activity against clinically
derived resistance mutations but also led to the incorporation of
activity for focal adhesion kinase (FAK). FAK activation, via amplification
and/or overexpression, is characteristic of multiple invasive solid
tumors and metastasis. The discovery of the clinical stage, dual FAK/ALK
inhibitor <b>27b</b>, including details surrounding SAR, in
vitro/in vivo pharmacology, and pharmacokinetics, is reported herein