Journal ArticleDOI
MEK162 for patients with advanced melanoma harbouring NRAS or Val600 BRAF mutations: a non-randomised, open-label phase 2 study
Paolo A. Ascierto,Dirk Schadendorf,Carola Berking,Sanjiv S. Agarwala,Carla M.L. van Herpen,Paola Queirolo,Christian U. Blank,Axel Hauschild,J. Thaddeus Beck,Annie St-Pierre,Faiz Niazi,Simon Wandel,Malte Peters,Angela Zubel,Reinhard Dummer +14 more
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TLDR
MEK162 is the first targeted therapy to show activity in patients with NRAS -mutated melanoma and might offer a new option for a cancer with few effective treatments.Abstract:
Summary Background Patients with melanoma harbouring Val600 BRAF mutations benefit from treatment with BRAF inhibitors. However, no targeted treatments exist for patients with BRAF wild-type tumours, including those with NRAS mutations. We aimed to assess the use of MEK162, a small-molecule MEK1/2 inhibitor, in patients with NRAS -mutated or Val600 BRAF -mutated advanced melanoma. Methods In our open-label, non-randomised, phase 2 study, we assigned patients with NRAS -mutated or BRAF -mutated advanced melanoma to one of three treatment arms on the basis of mutation status. Patients were enrolled at university hospitals or private cancer centres in Europe and the USA. The three arms were: twice-daily MEK162 45 mg for NRAS -mutated melanoma, twice-daily MEK162 45 mg for BRAF -mutated melanoma, and twice-daily MEK162 60 mg for BRAF -mutated melanoma. Previous treatment with BRAF inhibitors was permitted, but previous MEK inhibitor therapy was not allowed. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients who had an objective response (ie, a complete response or confirmed partial response). We report data for the 45 mg groups. We assessed clinical activity in all patients who received at least one dose of MEK162 and in patients assessable for response (with two available CT scans). This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01320085, and is currently recruiting additional patients with NRAS mutations (based on a protocol amendment). Findings Between March 31, 2011, and Jan 17, 2012, we enrolled 71 patients who received at least one dose of MEK162 45 mg. By Feb 29, 2012 (data cutoff), median follow-up was 3·3 months (range 0·6–8·7; IQR 2·2–5·0). No patients had a complete response. Six (20%) of 30 patients with NRAS -mutated melanoma had a partial response (three confirmed) as did eight (20%) of 41 patients with BRAF -mutated melanoma (two confirmed). The most frequent adverse events were acneiform dermatitis (18 [60%] patients with NRAS -mutated melanoma and 15 [37%] patients with the BRAF -mutated melanoma), rash (six [20%] and 16 [39%]), peripheral oedema (ten [33%] and 14 [34%]), facial oedema (nine [30%] and seven [17%]), diarrhoea (eight [27%] and 15 [37%]), and creatine phosphokinase increases (11 [37%] and nine [22%]). Increased creatine phosphokinase was the most common grade 3–4 adverse event (seven [23%] and seven [17%]). Four patients had serious adverse events (two per arm), which included diarrhoea, dehydration, acneiform dermatitis, general physical deterioration, irregular heart rate, malaise, and small intestinal perforation. No deaths occurred from treatment-related causes. Interpretation To our knowledge, MEK162 is the first targeted therapy to show activity in patients with NRAS -mutated melanoma and might offer a new option for a cancer with few effective treatments. Funding Novartis Pharmaceuticals.read more
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Activated Ras as a Therapeutic Target: Constraints on Directly Targeting Ras Isoforms and Wild-Type versus Mutated Proteins
TL;DR: The ability to selectively and directly target activated Ras would provide immense utility for treatment of the numerous cancers that are driven by oncogenic Ras mutations, and patients with disorders driven by overactivated wild-type Ras proteins might benefit from progress made in that context.
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Signature program: a platform of basket trials.
Eric Daniel Slosberg,Barinder P. Kang,Julio Peguero,Matthew H. Taylor,Todd M. Bauer,Donald A. Berry,Fadi Braiteh,Alexander I. Spira,Funda Meric-Bernstam,Steven Stein,Sarina Anne Piha-Paul,A. Salvado +11 more
TL;DR: The Signature Program presents a unique and successful approach for rapid signal finding across multiple tumors and allowed various agents to be evaluated in patients with rare alterations to lead to improved trial efficiencies and patient outcomes.
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Targeting mutant NRAS signaling pathways in melanoma.
Ha Linh Vu,Andrew E. Aplin +1 more
TL;DR: This review examines the major downstream effectors of NRAS relevant in melanoma and the associated advances made in targeted therapies that focus on these effector pathways and focuses on recently identified targets that can be used in combination with MEK inhibitors.
Journal ArticleDOI
Targeted next generation sequencing identifies clinically actionable mutations in patients with melanoma.
William R. Jeck,Joel S. Parker,Craig C. Carson,Janiel M. Shields,Maria J. Sambade,Eldon C. Peters,Christin E. Burd,Nancy E. Thomas,Derek Y. Chiang,Wenjin Liu,David A. Eberhard,David W. Ollila,Juneko E. Grilley-Olson,Stergios J. Moschos,D. Neil Hayes,Norman E. Sharpless +15 more
TL;DR: This work shows that targeted sequencing is an attractive approach for clinical use in melanoma, and identifies focal copy number changes of PTEN not found by standard methods, such as comparative genomic hybridization (CGH).
Journal ArticleDOI
NRAS mutations are more prevalent than KIT mutations in melanoma of the female urogenital tract—A study of 24 cases from the Netherlands
Adriana C. H. van Engen-van Grunsven,Heidi V.N. Küsters-Vandevelde,Joanne A. de Hullu,Lucette M. van Duijn,Jos Rijntjes,Judith V.M.G. Bovée,Patricia J. T. A. Groenen,Willeke A. M. Blokx +7 more
TL;DR: Melanomas of the female urogenital tract relatively commonly harbor mutations in NRAS; this makes NRAS an interesting therapeutic target for these patients in the advanced setting.
References
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Improved Survival with Ipilimumab in Patients with Metastatic Melanoma.
F. Stephen Hodi,Steven J. O'Day,David F. McDermott,R. W. Weber,Jeffrey A. Sosman,John B. A. G. Haanen,Rene Gonzalez,Caroline Robert,Dirk Schadendorf,Jessica C. Hassel,Wallace Akerley,Alfons J.M. van den Eertwegh,Jose Lutzky,Paul Lorigan,Julia Vaubel,Gerald P. Linette,David W. Hogg,Christian H. Ottensmeier,Céleste Lebbé,Christian Peschel,Ian Quirt,Joseph I. Clark,Jedd D. Wolchok,Jeffrey S. Weber,Jason Tian,Michael Yellin,Geoffrey M. Nichol,Axel Hoos,Walter J. Urba +28 more
TL;DR: Ipilimumab, with or without a gp100 peptide vaccine, as compared with gp100 alone, improved overall survival in patients with previously treated metastatic melanoma.
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Improved Survival with Vemurafenib in Melanoma with BRAF V600E Mutation
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Dabrafenib in BRAF-mutated metastatic melanoma: a multicentre, open-label, phase 3 randomised controlled trial
Axel Hauschild,Jean-Jacques Grob,Lev V. Demidov,Thomas Jouary,Ralf Gutzmer,Michael Millward,Piotr Rutkowski,Christian U. Blank,Wilson H. Miller,Eckhart Kaempgen,Salvador Martín-Algarra,Boguslawa Karaszewska,Cornelia Mauch,Vanna Chiarion-Sileni,Anne-Marie Martin,Suzanne Swann,Patricia Haney,Beloo Mirakhur,Mary E. Guckert,Vicki L. Goodman,Paul B. Chapman +20 more
TL;DR: Dabrafenib significantly improved progression-free survival compared with dacarbazine, and skin-related toxic effects, fever, fatigue, arthralgia, and headache were uncommon in both groups.
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Combined BRAF and MEK Inhibition in Melanoma with BRAF V600 Mutations
Keith T. Flaherty,J. R. Infante,Adil Daud,Rene Gonzalez,Richard F. Kefford,Jeffrey A. Sosman,Omid Hamid,Lynn M. Schuchter,Jonathan Cebon,Nageatte Ibrahim,Ragini Kudchadkar,Howard A. Burris,Gerald S. Falchook,Alain Algazi,Karl D. Lewis,Georgina V. Long,Igor Puzanov,Peter F. Lebowitz,Ajay Singh,Shonda M Little,Peng Sun,Alicia Allred,Daniele Ouellet,Kevin B. Kim,Kiran Patel,Jeffrey S. Weber +25 more
TL;DR: Dabrafenib and trametinib were safely combined at full monotherapy doses, and the rate of pyrexia was increased with combination therapy, whereas the rates of proliferative skin lesions was nonsignificantly reduced.
Journal ArticleDOI
Distinct Sets of Genetic Alterations in Melanoma
John A. Curtin,Jane Fridlyand,Toshiro Kageshita,Hetal N. Patel,Klaus J. Busam,Heinz Kutzner,Kwang Hyun Cho,Setsuya Aiba,Eva B. Bröcker,Philip E. LeBoit,Daniel Pinkel,Boris C. Bastian +11 more
TL;DR: The genetic alterations identified in melanoma at different sites and with different levels of sun exposure indicate that there are distinct genetic pathways in the development of melanoma and implicate CDK4 and CCND1 as independent oncogenes in melanomas without mutations in BRAF or N-RAS.
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