Pacritinib is a potent ACVR1 inhibitor with significant anemia benefit in patients with myelofibrosis

Stephen T. Oh(Washington University in St. Louis), Ruben A. Mesa(Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist), Claire Harrison(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Prithviraj Bose(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Aaron T. Gerds(Cleveland Clinic), Vikas Gupta(University Health Network), Bart L. Scott(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Jean‐Jacques Kiladjian(Université Paris Cité), Alessandro Lucchesi(Istituto Scientifico Romagnolo per lo Studio e la Cura dei Tumori), Tim Kong(Washington University in St. Louis), Sarah Buckley(CTI BioPharma (United States)), Shanthakumar Tyavanagimatt(CTI BioPharma (United States)), Bryan Harder(CTI BioPharma (United States)), Karisse Roman‐Torres(CTI BioPharma (United States)), Jennifer A. Smith(CTI BioPharma (United States)), Adam R. Craig(CTI BioPharma (United States)), John Mascarenhas(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Srđan Verstovšek(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center)
Blood Advances
August 8, 2023
Cited by 72Open Access
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Abstract

In patients with cytopenic myelofibrosis, treatment with the JAK2/IRAK1 inhibitor pacritinib was associated with anemia benefit in the phase 3 PERSIST-2 study. The impact of pacritinib on transfusion independence (TI) has not been previously described, nor has the mechanism by which pacritinib improves anemia been elucidated. Because it has been previously postulated that inhibition of activin A receptor, type 1 (ACVR1)/activin receptor-like kinase-2 improves anemia in patients with myelofibrosis via suppression of hepcidin production, we assessed the relative inhibitory potency of pacritinib compared with other JAK2 inhibitors against ACVR1. Pacritinib inhibited ACVR1 with greater potency (half-maximal inhibitory concentration [IC50] = 16.7 nM; Cmax:IC50 = 12.7) than momelotinib (IC50 = 52.5 nM; Cmax:IC50 = 3.2), fedratinib (IC50 = 273 nM; Cmax:IC50 = 1.0), or ruxolitinib (IC50 > 1000; Cmax:IC50 < 0.01). Pacritinib's inhibitory activity against ACVR1 was corroborated via inhibition of downstream SMAD signaling in conjunction with marked suppression of hepcidin production. Among patients on PERSIST-2 who were not transfusion independent at baseline based on Gale criteria, a significantly greater proportion achieved TI on pacritinib compared with those treated on best available therapy (37% vs 7%, P = .001), and significantly more had a ≥50% reduction in transfusion burden (49% vs 9%, P < .0001). These data indicate that the anemia benefit of the JAK2/IRAK1 inhibitor pacritinib may be a function of potent ACVR1 inhibition.


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