Bromodomain and extra-terminal inhibitors-A consensus prioritisation after the Paediatric Strategy Forum for medicinal product development of epigenetic modifiers in children-ACCELERATE
- PMID: 33601323
- DOI: 10.1016/j.ejca.2021.01.018
Bromodomain and extra-terminal inhibitors-A consensus prioritisation after the Paediatric Strategy Forum for medicinal product development of epigenetic modifiers in children-ACCELERATE
Abstract
Based on biology and pre-clinical data, bromodomain and extra-terminal (BET) inhibitors have at least three potential roles in paediatric malignancies: NUT (nuclear protein in testis) carcinomas, MYC/MYCN-driven cancers and fusion-driven malignancies. However, there are now at least 10 BET inhibitors in development, with a limited relevant paediatric population in which to evaluate these medicinal products. Therefore, a meeting was convened with the specific aim to develop a consensus among relevant biopharmaceutical companies, academic researchers, as well as patient and family advocates, about the development of BET inhibitors, including prioritisation and their specific roles in children. Although BET inhibitors have been in clinical trials in adults since 2012, the first-in-child study (BMS-986158) only opened in 2019. In the future, when there is strong mechanistic rationale or pre-clinical activity of a class of medicinal product in paediatrics, early clinical evaluation with embedded correlative studies of a member of the class should be prioritised and rapidly executed in paediatric populations. There is a strong mechanistic and biological rationale to evaluate BET inhibitors in paediatrics, underpinned by substantial, but not universal, pre-clinical data. However, most pan-BET inhibitors have been challenging to administer in adults, since monotherapy results in only modest anti-tumour activity and provides a narrow therapeutic index due to thrombocytopenia. It was concluded that it is neither scientifically justified nor feasible to undertake simultaneously early clinical trials in paediatrics of all pan-BET inhibitors. However, there is a clinical need for global access to BET inhibitors for patients with NUT carcinoma, a very rare malignancy driven by bromodomain fusions, with proof of concept of clinical benefit in a subset of patients treated with BET inhibitors. Development and regulatory pathway in this indication should include children and adolescents as well as adults. Beyond NUT carcinoma, it was proposed that further clinical development of other pan-BET inhibitors in children should await the results of the first paediatric clinical trial of BMS-986158, unless there is compelling rationale based on the specific agent of interest. BDII-selective inhibitors, central nervous system-penetrant BET inhibitors (e.g. CC-90010), and those dual-targeting BET/p300 bromodomain are of particular interest and warrant further pre-clinical investigation. This meeting emphasised the value of a coordinated and integrated strategy to drug development in paediatric oncology. A multi-stakeholder approach with multiple companies developing a consensus with academic investigators early in the development of a class of compounds, and then engaging regulatory agencies would improve efficiency, productivity, conserve resources and maximise potential benefit for children with cancer.
Keywords: BET inhibitors; Bromodomain; Cancer therapeutics; Drug development; Epigenetic mechanisms; MYC/MYCN; NUT; Paediatric Strategy Forum; Paediatric oncology.
Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflict of interest statement KS has consulted for Kronos Bio and Auron Therapeutics, receives grant funding from Novartis for an unrelated project, holds stock options with Auron Therapeutics, and has given a sponsored presentation for Bristol Meyers Squibb. MK is an employee of Bristol Myers Squibb. KB is an employee of AbbVie. EG is an employee of Boehringer Ingelheim Pharma GmbH & Co KG. FG has consulted for Epigene Therapeutics. MH is an employee of Astra-Zeneca. KL is an employee of Constellation Pharmaceuticals. ZN is an employee of Celgene/Bristol Myers Squibb. AT is an employee of Plexxikon. FZ is an employee of Incyte. ADJP has participated in advisory boards for Novartis, Takeda, Merck, Lilly and Celgene. SGD has received fees for consulting and advisory board roles from Bayer and Loxo Oncology and has received travel expenses from Loxo Oncology, Roche/Genentech, and Salarius Pharmaceuticals. All remaining authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
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