On Thursday last week the FDA
approved capivasertib for certain breast cancer patients. This marks the seventh
fragment-derived drug to be approved. It is also the first approved drug targeting
the kinase AKT.
Practical Fragments first
wrote about capivasertib, then called AZD5363, way back in 2013, where we described
the decade-long odyssey from fragment to drug. Interestingly that fragment, 7-azaindole,
was also the starting point for two other approved drugs, pexidartinib and
vemurafenib. As we noted at the time, “high-affinity molecules were obtained
relatively quickly, but these still required a huge amount of effort to achieve
selectivity, oral bioavailability, and other properties.”
What happened next is a poster
child to counter one of the false beliefs Christopher Austin noted as being widespread
outside industry: “Once an investigational therapy gets into humans for the
first time, regulatory approval and marketing are all but assured.”
Capivasertib entered the clinic
in 2010 in the first of more than 30 studies listed on ClinicalTrials.gov to
date. One challenge was finding patients that would benefit sufficiently to
offset a long list of side effects, including diarrhea and glucose fluctuations.
In the end, the current approval is in combination with fulvestrant for “adult
patients with hormone receptor (HR)-positive, human epidermal growth factor
receptor 2 (HER2)-negative locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer with
one or more PIK3CA/AKT1/PTEN-alterations, as detected by an FDA-approved test,
following progression on at least one endocrine-based regimen in the metastatic
setting or recurrence on or within 12 months of completing adjuvant therapy.”
Needless to say, these were not
the first patients tested. Use of genetic testing to match patients with a drug
likely to help them is not routine even today, let alone in 2010. Managing side
effects also required figuring out how much of the drug to dose and how often. But
additional combination trials are ongoing. Perhaps, as with venetoclax, capivasertib
will eventually prove to be useful for a wider range of patients.
The first marketed fragment-derived
drug, vemurafenib, sprinted from program initiation to approval in just six
years. Capivasertib took twenty. As we previously noted, success in drug
discovery is not necessarily fast or inevitable. Every year more than 40,000
people die of breast cancer in the US alone, but the death rate has slowly been
declining. Hopefully the introduction of capivasertib will continue to reduce
this.
Congratulations to all the
researchers at AstraZeneca, Astex, and the Institute for Cancer Research for participating
and persisting in this 20-year marathon to bring a new treatment to people with
cancer.
No comments:
Post a Comment