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Evidence Suggesting That Discontinuous Dosing of ALK Kinase Inhibitors May Prolong Control of ALK+ Tumors. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • ALK is involved in certain cancers, like 2%-7% of non-small cell lung cancers and about 70% of anaplastic large cell lymphomas, leading to drug treatments using ALK inhibitors like crizotinib and ceritinib.
  • Acquired resistance to these drugs in NSCLC often occurs due to mutations or activation of alternate pathways, while in ALCL, resistance is primarily due to increased ALK signaling rather than bypass pathways.
  • Increased ALK signaling can either trigger tumor cell death or facilitate prolonged tumor control with strategic dosing regimens, suggesting potential new therapeutic approaches for managing ALK-related cancers.

Article Abstract

The anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) is chromosomally rearranged in a subset of certain cancers, including 2% to 7% of non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC) and ∼70% of anaplastic large cell lymphomas (ALCL). The ALK kinase inhibitors crizotinib and ceritinib are approved for relapsed ALK(+) NSCLC, but acquired resistance to these drugs limits median progression-free survival on average to ∼10 months. Kinase domain mutations are detectable in 25% to 37% of resistant NSCLC samples, with activation of bypass signaling pathways detected frequently with or without concurrent ALK mutations. Here we report that, in contrast to NSCLC cells, drug-resistant ALCL cells show no evidence of bypassing ALK by activating alternate signaling pathways. Instead, drug resistance selected in this setting reflects upregulation of ALK itself. Notably, in the absence of crizotinib or ceritinib, we found that increased ALK signaling rapidly arrested or killed cells, allowing a prolonged control of drug-resistant tumors in vivo with the administration of discontinuous rather than continuous regimens of drug dosing. Furthermore, even when drug resistance mutations were detected in the kinase domain, overexpression of the mutant ALK was toxic to tumor cells. We confirmed these findings derived from human ALCL cells in murine pro-B cells that were transformed to cytokine independence by ectopic expression of an activated NPM-ALK fusion oncoprotein. In summary, our results show how ALK activation functions as a double-edged sword for tumor cell viability, with potential therapeutic implications.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4506255PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-3437DOI Listing

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