4.7 Article

Nintedanib overcomes drug resistance from upregulation of FGFR signalling and imatinib-induced KIT mutations in gastrointestinal stromal tumours

Journal

MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 8, Pages 1761-1774

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/1878-0261.13199

Keywords

FGFR; GISTs; imatinib resistance; KIT; nintedanib

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81803366, 81903659, 82104239, 81872748, 82104200]
  2. Plan for Major Anhui Provincial Science & Technology Project [202003a07020006]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Anhui Province [1908085MH259, 1808085MH274, 2008085MH274]
  4. Frontier Science Key Research Program of CAS [QYZDB-SSW-SLH037]
  5. Collaborative Innovation Program of Hefei Science Center, CAS [2019HSC-CIP011]
  6. CASHIPS Director's Fund [YZJJZX202011, BJPY2019A03]
  7. CAS [2019437]
  8. High Magnetic Field Laboratory of Anhui Province

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Drug resistance is a major challenge in the treatment of gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GISTs). A study has found that nintedanib can overcome resistance caused by mutations in the KIT gene and upregulation of fibroblast growth factor (FGF) activity. Nintedanib also showed inhibitory effects on cell proliferation and ERK phosphorylation in preclinical GIST models.
Drug resistance remains a major challenge in the clinical treatment of gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GISTs). While acquired on-target mutations of mast/stem cell growth factor receptor (KIT) kinase is the major resistance mechanism, activation of alternative signalling pathways may also play a role. Although several second- and third-generation KIT kinase inhibitors have been developed that could overcome some of the KIT mutations conferring resistance, the low clinical responses and narrow safety window have limited their broad application. The present study revealed that nintedanib not only overcame resistance induced by a panel of KIT primary and secondary mutations, but also overcame ERK-reactivation-mediated resistance caused by the upregulation of fibroblast growth factor (FGF) activity. In preclinical models of GISTs, nintedanib significantly inhibited the proliferation of imatinib-resistant cells, including GIST-5R, GIST-T1/T670I and GIST patient-derived primary cells. In addition, it also exhibited dose-dependent inhibition of ERK phosphorylation upon FGF ligand stimulation. In vivo antitumour activity was also observed in several xenograft GIST models. Considering the well-documented safety and pharmacokinetic profiles of nintedanib, this finding provides evidence for the repurposing of nintedanib as a new therapy for the treatment of GIST patients with de novo or acquired resistance to imatinib.

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