4.6 Article

Mechanism of action biomarkers predicting response to AKT inhibition in the I-SPY 2 breast cancer trial

Journal

NPJ BREAST CANCER
Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41523-020-00189-2

Keywords

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Categories

Funding

  1. Quantum Leap Healthcare Collaborative, FNIH, NCI [P01 CA210961]
  2. Safeway
  3. Albertsons Company
  4. William K. Bowes, Jr. Foundation
  5. Breast Cancer Research Foundation
  6. UCSF
  7. GMU
  8. Gateway for Cancer Research [G-16-900]
  9. Biomarkers Consortium
  10. Salesforce
  11. OpenClinica
  12. Formedix
  13. Natera
  14. Hologic Inc.
  15. TGen
  16. Illumina
  17. CCS Associates
  18. Berry Consultants
  19. Breast Cancer Research - Atwater Trust
  20. Stand up to Cancer
  21. California Breast Cancer Research Program
  22. Give Breast Cancer the Boot
  23. IQVIA
  24. Genentech
  25. Amgen
  26. Pfizer
  27. Merck
  28. Seattle Genetics
  29. Daiichi Sankyo
  30. AstraZeneca
  31. Dynavax Technologies
  32. Puma Biotechnology
  33. Plexxikon
  34. AbbVie
  35. Madrigal Pharmaceuticals
  36. Regeneron
  37. Agendia

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The AKT inhibitor MK2206 (M) was evaluated in I-SPY 2 and graduated in the HER2+, HR-, and HR- HER2+ signatures. We hypothesized that AKT signaling axis proteins/genes may specifically predict response to M and tested 26 phospho-proteins and 10 genes involved in AKT-mTOR-HER signaling; in addition, we tested 9 genes from a previous study in the metastatic setting. One hundred and fifty patients had gene expression data from pretreatment biopsies available for analysis (M: 94, control: 56) and 138 had protein data (M: 87, control: 51). Logistic modeling was used to assess biomarker performance in pre-specified analysis. In general, phospho-protein biomarkers of activity in the AKT-mTOR-HER pathway appeared more predictive of response to M than gene expression or total protein biomarkers in the same pathway; however, the nature of the predictive biomarkers differed in the HER2+ and TN groups. In the HER2+ subset, patients achieving a pCR in M had higher levels of multiple AKT kinase substrate phospho-proteins (e.g., pmTOR, pTSC2). In contrast, in the TN subset responding patients had lower levels of AKT pathway phospho-proteins, such as pAKT, pmTOR, and pTSC2. Pathway mutations did not appear to account for these associations. Additional exploratory whole-transcriptome analysis revealed immune signaling as strongly associated with response to M in the HER2+ subset. While our sample size is small, these results suggest that the measurement of particular AKT kinase substrate phospho-proteins could be predictive of MK2206 efficacy in both HER2+ and TN tumors and that immune signaling may play a role in response in HER2+ patients.

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