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Vimseltinib: A precision CSF1R therapy for tenosynovial giant cell tumors and diseases promoted by macrophages.

Abstract

Macrophages can be co-opted to contribute to neoplastic, neurologic, and inflammatory diseases. Colony stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF1R)-dependent macrophages and other inflammatory cells can suppress the adaptive immune system in cancer and contribute to angiogenesis, tumor growth, and metastasis. CSF1R-expressing osteoclasts mediate bone degradation in osteolytic cancers and cancers that metastasize to bone. In the rare disease tenosynovial giant cell tumor (TGCT), aberrant CSF1 expression and production driven by a gene translocation leads to the recruitment and growth of tumors formed by CSF1R-dependent inflammatory cells. Small molecules and antibodies targeting the CSF1/CSF1R axis have shown promise in the treatment of TGCT and cancer, with pexidartinib recently receiving Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for treatment of TGCT. Many small molecule kinase inhibitors of CSF1R also inhibit the closely related kinases KIT, PDGFRA, PDGFRB, and FLT3, thus CSF1R suppression may be limited by off-target activity and associated adverse events. Vimseltinib (DCC-3014) is an oral, switch control tyrosine kinase inhibitor specifically designed to selectively and potently inhibit CSF1R by exploiting unique features of the switch control region that regulates kinase conformational activation. In preclinical studies, vimseltinib durably suppressed CSF1R activity in vitro and in vivo, depleted macrophages and other CSF1R-dependent cells, and resulted in inhibition of tumor growth and bone degradation in mouse cancer models. Translationally, in a phase 1 clinical study, vimseltinib treatment led to modulation of biomarkers of CSF1R inhibition and reduction in tumor burden in initial TGCT patients.

Authors: Smith BD, Kaufman MD, Wise SC, Ahn YM, Caldwell TM, Leary CB, Lu WP, Tan G, Vogeti L, Vogeti S, Wilky BA, Davis LE, Sharma M, Ruiz-Soto R, Flynn DL,
Journal: Mol Cancer Ther;2021 Nov;20(11):2098-2109. doi:10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-21-0361
Year: 2021
PubMed: PMID: 34433663 (Go to PubMed)