Pharmacologic activity and pharmacokinetics of metabolites of regorafenib in preclinical models

Abstract Regorafenib is an orally administered inhibitor of protein kinases involved in tumor angiogenesis, oncogenesis, and maintenance of the tumor microenvironment. Phase III studies showed that regorafenib has efficacy in patients with advanced gastrointestinal stromal tumors or treatment‐refrac...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dieter Zopf, Iduna Fichtner, Ajay Bhargava, Wolfram Steinke, Karl‐Heinz Thierauch, Konstanze Diefenbach, Scott Wilhelm, Frank‐Thorsten Hafner, Michael Gerisch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2016-11-01
Series:Cancer Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.883
Description
Summary:Abstract Regorafenib is an orally administered inhibitor of protein kinases involved in tumor angiogenesis, oncogenesis, and maintenance of the tumor microenvironment. Phase III studies showed that regorafenib has efficacy in patients with advanced gastrointestinal stromal tumors or treatment‐refractory metastatic colorectal cancer. In clinical studies, steady‐state exposure to the M‐2 and M‐5 metabolites of regorafenib was similar to that of the parent drug; however, the contribution of these metabolites to the overall observed clinical activity of regorafenib cannot be investigated in clinical trials. Therefore, we assessed the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of regorafenib, M‐2, and M‐5 in vitro and in murine xenograft models. M‐2 and M‐5 showed similar kinase inhibition profiles and comparable potency to regorafenib in a competitive binding assay. Inhibition of key target kinases by all three compounds was confirmed in cell‐based assays. In murine xenograft models, oral regorafenib, M‐2, and M‐5 significantly inhibited tumor growth versus controls. Total peak plasma drug concentrations and exposure to M‐2 and M‐5 in mice after repeated oral dosing with regorafenib 10 mg/kg/day were comparable to those in humans. In vitro studies showed high binding of regorafenib, M‐2, and M‐5 to plasma proteins, with unbound fractions of ~0.6%, ~0.9%, and ~0.4%, respectively, in murine plasma and ~0.5%, ~0.2%, and ~0.05%, respectively, in human plasma. Estimated free plasma concentrations of regorafenib and M‐2, but not M‐5, exceeded the IC50 at human and murine VEGFR2, suggesting that regorafenib and M‐2 are the primary contributors to the pharmacologic activity of regorafenib in vivo.
ISSN:2045-7634