The selective Aurora B kinase inhibitor AZD1152 is a potential new treatment for multiple myeloma

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Abstract

Aurora kinases are potential targets for cancer therapy. Previous studies have validated Aurora kinase A as a therapeutic target in multiple myeloma (MM), and have demonstrated in vitro anti-myeloma effects of small molecule Aurora kinase inhibitors that inhibit both Aurora A and B. This study demonstrated that Aurora B kinase was strongly expressed in myeloma cell lines and primary plasma cells. The selective Aurora B inhibitor AZD1152-induced apoptotic death in myeloma cell lines at nanomolar concentrations, with a cell cycle phenotype consistent with that reported previously for Aurora B inhibition. In some cases, AZD1152 in combination with dexamethasone showed increased anti-myeloma activity compared with the use of either agent alone. AZD1152 was active against sorted CD138+ BM plasma cells from myeloma patients but also, as expected, was toxic to CD138- marrow cells from the same patients. In a murine myeloma xenograft model, AZD1152-inhibited tumour growth at well-tolerated doses and induced cell death in established tumours, with associated mild, transient leucopenia. AZD1152 shows promise in these preclinical studies as a novel treatment for MM. © 2007 The Authors.

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Evans, R. P., Naber, C., Steffler, T., Checkland, T., Maxwell, C. A., Keats, J. J., … Reiman, T. (2008). The selective Aurora B kinase inhibitor AZD1152 is a potential new treatment for multiple myeloma. British Journal of Haematology, 140(3), 295–302. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2141.2007.06913.x

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