NANETS2022 15th Annual Multidisciplinary NET Medical Symposium NANETS 2022 Basic Science (16 abstracts)
1University of Iowa and Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center, 2University of North Carolina, 3Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey.
Background: New therapeutics and combinations are needed to improve the survival of patients with advanced, metastatic pancreatic NETs (pNETs). RABL6A is a novel oncogenic driver of pNET pathogenesis that acts through multiple oncogenic pathways. Kinome and phosphoproteome analyses of proliferating (RABL6A-positive) pNET cells, vs arrested (RABL6A-knockdown) controls, demonstrated that druggable cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and 6 (CDK4/6) and MEK kinases are activated in growing pNET cells. Consistent with those findings, published studies of patient pNETs by immunohistochemistry (IHC) and RNAseq have identified robust activation of CDK4/6 and MEK in the tumors. Studies in other tumor types show CDK4/6 and MEK inhibitors have synergistic antitumor activity linked with heightened CD8 T cell and/or natural killer cell activation. This drug combination has not yet been evaluated in pNETs.
Methods: Synergistic effects of MEK inhibitor (Mirdametinib) and CDK4/6 inhibitor (Palbociclib) were measured by cell proliferation & survival assays, colony formation and immunoblotting. Tumor suppressive effects of drug inhibitors were measured in vivo using 3 pNET mouse models: 1) flank xenografts in immunodeficient mice, 2) tail vein metastasis xenografts in immunodeficient mice, and 3) immune competent, Pdx1-Cre;Men1fl/fl;Ptenfl/fl knockout mice that develop insulinoma by 5-6 months of age.
Results: Dual CDK4/6-MEK inhibitor therapy was highly synergistic in vitro in causing pNET cell death and pathway inactivation, as measured by retinoblastoma protein (RB1) hypo-phosphorylation. In vivo, the CDK4/6-MEK combination significantly slowed the growth of flank pNET xenografts, yielding a 6-fold extension of average survival (~120 days vs 20 days for vehicle control). This combination likewise suppressed (but did not eliminate) pNET growth in a bioluminescence metastasis model and effectively reduced the number of colonized tissues relative to monotherapy controls. Most impressively, dual CDK4/6-MEK inhibition caused dramatic tumor regression associated with a unique B/plasma cell infiltration phenotype in our Pdx1-Cre;Men1fl/fl;Ptenfl/fl mouse model of insulinoma.
Conclusions: Combination therapy targeting CDK4/6 and MEK effectively inhibits pNET growth and metastatic colonization. Monotherapies were not effective, in agreement with failed CDK4/6 monotherapy trials in pNET patients. In immune competent Pdx1-Cre;Men1fl/fl;Ptenfl/fl mice, CDK4/6-MEK inhibition causes significant tumor regression linked with tumor infiltration of B and plasma cells. These data suggest that the increased efficacy of CDK4/6-MEK targeted therapy against pNETs in immune competent mice is due to activation of an anti-tumor immune response, which we propose may sensitize tumors to immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy.
Abstract ID 21475