In the clinic: ongoing clinical trials evaluating c-MET-inhibiting drugs

N Sharma, AA Adjei - Therapeutic advances in medical …, 2011 - journals.sagepub.com
N Sharma, AA Adjei
Therapeutic advances in medical oncology, 2011journals.sagepub.com
The c-MET (mesenchymal–epithelial transition factor) pathway is dysregulated in many
human cancers and promotes tumor growth, invasion and dissemination. The c-MET
receptor tyrosine kinase can be activated via gene mutation, gene amplification, protein
overexpression and/or a ligand-dependent autocrine/paracrine loop. Abnormalities in c-MET
signaling have been reported to correlate with poor clinical outcomes and drug resistance in
patients with cancer. Significant progress has been made in advancement of c-MET pathway …
The c-MET (mesenchymal–epithelial transition factor) pathway is dysregulated in many human cancers and promotes tumor growth, invasion and dissemination. The c-MET receptor tyrosine kinase can be activated via gene mutation, gene amplification, protein overexpression and/or a ligand-dependent autocrine/paracrine loop. Abnormalities in c-MET signaling have been reported to correlate with poor clinical outcomes and drug resistance in patients with cancer. Significant progress has been made in advancement of c-MET pathway inhibitors through to clinical trials. A robust pipeline of high-quality inhibitors targeting different aspects of c-MET activation is currently being explored in phase I, II and III clinical trials across multiple tumor types. Preliminary data demonstrate promising clinical activity with these agents, along with an acceptable toxicity profile. In this manuscript, the pharmacological profile of drugs targeting the c-MET pathway and available data from ongoing clinical trials of these drugs are discussed.
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