1. Academic Validation
  2. Preclinical activity of ABT-869, a multitargeted receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor

Preclinical activity of ABT-869, a multitargeted receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor

  • Mol Cancer Ther. 2006 Apr;5(4):995-1006. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-05-0410.
Daniel H Albert 1 Paul Tapang Terrance J Magoc Lori J Pease David R Reuter Ru-Qi Wei Junling Li Jun Guo Peter F Bousquet Nayereh S Ghoreishi-Haack Baole Wang Gail T Bukofzer Yi-Chun Wang Jason A Stavropoulos Kresna Hartandi Amanda L Niquette Nirupama Soni Eric F Johnson J Owen McCall Jennifer J Bouska Yanping Luo Cherrie K Donawho Yujia Dai Patrick A Marcotte Keith B Glaser Michael R Michaelides Steven K Davidsen
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Cancer Research, Global Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Abbott Laboratories, R47J, Building AP9/2, 100 Abbott Park Road, Abbott Park, IL 60064-3500, USA. daniel.h.albert@abbott.com
Abstract

ABT-869 is a structurally novel, receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) inhibitor that is a potent inhibitor of members of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptor families (e.g., VEGFR2/KDR/Flk-1 IC50 = 4 nmol/L) but has much less activity (IC50s > 1 micromol/L) against unrelated RTKs, soluble tyrosine kinases, or serine/threonine kinases. The inhibition profile of ABT-869 is evident in cellular assays of RTK phosphorylation (IC50 = 2, 4, and 7 nmol/L for PDGFR-beta, VEGFR2/KDR/Flk-1, and CSF-1R, respectively) and VEGF-stimulated proliferation (IC50 = 0.2 nmol/L for human endothelial cells). ABT-869 is not a general antiproliferative agent because, in most Cancer cells, >1,000-fold higher concentrations of ABT-869 are required for inhibition of proliferation. However, ABT-869 exhibits potent antiproliferative and apoptotic effects on Cancer cells whose proliferation is dependent on mutant kinases, such as FLT3. In vivo ABT-869 is effective orally in the mechanism-based murine models of VEGF-induced uterine edema (ED50 = 0.5 mg/kg) and corneal angiogenesis (>50% inhibition, 15 mg/kg). In tumor growth studies, ABT-869 exhibits efficacy in human fibrosarcoma and breast, colon, and small cell lung carcinoma xenograft models (ED50 = 1.5-5 mg/kg, twice daily) and is also effective (>50% inhibition) in orthotopic breast and glioma models. Reduction in tumor size and tumor regression was observed in epidermoid carcinoma and leukemia xenograft models, respectively. In combination, ABT-869 produced at least additive effects when given with cytotoxic therapies. Based on pharmacokinetic analysis from tumor growth studies, efficacy correlated more strongly with time over a threshold value (cellular VEGFR2/KDR/Flk-1 IC50 corrected for plasma protein binding = 0.08 microg/mL, >or=7 hours) than with plasma area under the curve or Cmax. These results support clinical assessment of ABT-869 as a therapeutic agent for Cancer.

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