A First-in-Human Phase I Study of the ATP-Competitive AKT Inhibitor Ipatasertib Demonstrates Robust and Safe Targeting of AKT in Patients with Solid Tumors

Cristina Saura(Hebron University), Desamparados Roda(INCLIVA Health Research Institute), Susana Roselló(INCLIVA Health Research Institute), Mafalda Oliveira(Hebron University), Teresa Macarulla(Hebron University), José Alejandro Pérez Fidalgo(INCLIVA Health Research Institute), Rafael Morales‐Barrera(Hebron University), Juan Sanchís(INCLIVA Health Research Institute), Luna Musib, Nageshwar Budha, Jin Zhu, Michelle Nannini, Wai‐Yee Chan, Sandra Sanabria Bohórquez, Raymond D. Meng, Kui Lin, Yibing Yan, Premal H. Patel, José Baselga(Hebron University), Josep Tabernero(Hebron University), Andrés Cervantes(INCLIVA Health Research Institute)
Cancer Discovery
November 21, 2016
Cited by 171Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Activation of AKT signaling by PTEN loss or PIK3CA mutations occurs frequently in human cancers, but targeting AKT has been difficult due to the mechanism-based toxicities of inhibitors that target the inactive conformation of AKT. Ipatasertib (GDC-0068) is a novel selective ATP-competitive small-molecule inhibitor of AKT that preferentially targets active phosphorylated AKT (pAKT) and is potent in cell lines with evidence of AKT activation. In this phase I study, ipatasertib was well tolerated; most adverse events were gastrointestinal and grade 1–2 in severity. The exposures of ipatasertib ≥200 mg daily in patients correlated with preclinical TGI90, and pharmacodynamic studies confirmed that multiple targets (i.e., PRAS40, GSK3β, and mTOR) were inhibited in paired on-treatment biopsies. Preliminary antitumor activity was observed; 16 of 52 patients (30%), with diverse solid tumors and who progressed on prior therapies, had radiographic stable disease, and many of their tumors had activation of AKT. Significance: Potent inhibition of AKT signaling with ipatasertib was associated with a tolerable safety profile and meaningful disease control in a subgroup of patients. Targeting pAKT with an ATP-competitive inhibitor provides a greater therapeutic window than allosteric inhibitors. Further investigation with ipatasertib is ongoing in phase II studies. Cancer Discov; 7(1); 102–13. ©2016 AACR. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1


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