The oncogenic receptor HER2 is overexpressed in many cancers, including up to 20% of breast cancers. Despite the availability of HER2-targeted treatments, patients' disease often progresses during therapy, underscoring the need for novel treatment strategies. The addition of tucatinib, a reversible, highly selective HER2 tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), to treatment with trastuzumab and capecitabine significantly improved survival outcomes of patients with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer, including those with active brain metastases. We rationalized that combining tucatinib with other HER2-targeting agents with complementary mechanisms of action would further increase efficacy against tumors.We characterized the activity of tucatinib with the antibody-drug conjugate T-DM1 in preclinicalmodels of breast cancer, including HER2-positive breast cancer cells and patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models. Mechanistic details on tucatinib activity were obtained in internalization and catabolism studies. In combination, tucatinib and T-DM1 showed an enhanced, often synergistic, cytotoxic response and demonstrated improved antitumor activity in vivo, including in PDXmodels refractory to T-DM1 single-agent activity. Mechanistically, tucatinibmediated an increase in inactiveHER2molecules at the cell surface through inhibition of HER2 ubiquitination, resulting in increased internalization and catabolism of T-DM1. The combination was correlated with enhanced HER2 pathway inhibition, decreased proliferation, and increased apoptosis. In a xenograft model of brain metastasis, tucatinib penetrated intracranial tumor tissues, inhibiting tumor growth and improving survival. These results suggest that tucatinibmay be the optimal TKI partner for HER2-targeted therapies and support clinical studies of its combination with T-DM1, including in patients with brainmetastases. Significance: The preclinical findings in breast cancer models presented here demonstrate that combining tucatinib with T-DM1 enhances the antitumor activity of either agent alone, supporting clinical studies of the combination in HER2-positive breast cancer, including in patients with brain metastases, which remains an important unmet medical need.
CITATION STYLE
Olson, D., Taylor, J., Willis, K., Hensley, K., Allred, S., Zaval, M., … Kulukian, A. (2023). HER2-Selective and Reversible Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor Tucatinib Potentiates the Activity of T-DM1 in Preclinical Models of HER2-positive Breast Cancer. Cancer Research Communications, 3(9), 1927–1939. https://doi.org/10.1158/2767-9764.CRC-23-0302
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.