Investigators at the UCLA Geffen School of Medicine have identified potential markers to predict the response of breast cancer patients to dasatinib, an oral multi-kinase SRC/ABL inhibitor. There is potential to use these markers in the clinical development of dasatinib and other SRC kinase inhibitors that treat solid tumors.
Cancer is one of the leading causes of death worldwide, killing millions of people every year. Of the different types of cancers, breast cancer is the leading cause of death among women, affecting over one million women worldwide every year. Currently, dasatinib is approved to treat chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and is in development to treat solid tumors, including breast cancer. However, there is a need to be able to identify patients most likely to respond to drugs like dasatinib. New diagnostics methods will be especially useful for women whose breast cancers fall under a specific triple negative subtype (estrogen receptor negative, progesterone receptor negative, and HER2 negative), and therefore lack effective treatments. Due to the lack of effective treatments, there is a need to identify the patients that might benefit from dasatinib.
UCLA researchers have identified predictive markers to identify human breast cancer cells that are likely to respond to dasatinib or to therapy with another SRC kinase inhibitor. This unique gene set has been identified by using an in vitro pharmocogenomic approach.
Inventors have employed the approach in human breast cancer cell lines in vitro. These markers will need to be validated in a clinical setting.
Country | Type | Number | Dated | Case |
United States Of America | Issued Patent | 8,007,995 | 08/30/2011 | 2006-263 |
diagnostics, biomarkers, predictive markers, dasatinib, human breast cancer, kinase inhibitor, triple negative, solid tumors, gene set, clinical development