npj Breast Cancer (Aug 2023)

Combining the AKT inhibitor capivasertib and SERD fulvestrant is effective in palbociclib-resistant ER+ breast cancer preclinical models

  • Lorna Hopcroft,
  • Eleanor M. Wigmore,
  • Stuart C. Williamson,
  • Susana Ros,
  • Cath Eberlein,
  • Jennifer I. Moss,
  • Jelena Urosevic,
  • Larissa S. Carnevalli,
  • Sara Talbot,
  • Lauren Bradshaw,
  • Catherine Blaker,
  • Sreeharsha Gunda,
  • Venetia Owenson,
  • Scott Hoffmann,
  • Daniel Sutton,
  • Stewart Jones,
  • Richard J. A. Goodwin,
  • Brandon S. Willis,
  • Claire Rooney,
  • Elza C. de Bruin,
  • Simon T. Barry

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41523-023-00571-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Combining the selective AKT inhibitor, capivasertib, and SERD, fulvestrant improved PFS in a Phase III clinical trial (CAPItello-291), treating HR+ breast cancer patients following aromatase inhibitors, with or without CDK4/6 inhibitors. However, clinical data suggests CDK4/6 treatment may reduce response to subsequent monotherapy endocrine treatment. To support understanding of trials such as CAPItello-291 and gain insight into this emerging population of patients, we explored how CDK4/6 inhibitor treatment influences ER+ breast tumour cell function and response to fulvestrant and capivasertib after CDK4/6 inhibitor treatment. In RB+, RB− T47D and MCF7 palbociclib-resistant cells ER pathway ER and Greb-1 expression were reduced versus naïve cells. PI3K-AKT pathway activation was also modified in RB+ cells, with capivasertib less effective at reducing pS6 in RB+ cells compared to parental cells. Expression profiling of parental versus palbociclib-resistant cells confirmed capivasertib, fulvestrant and the combination differentially impacted gene expression modulation in resistant cells, with different responses seen in T47D and MCF7 cells. Fulvestrant inhibition of ER-dependent genes was reduced. In resistant cells, the combination was less effective at reducing cell cycle genes, but a consistent reduction in cell fraction in S-phase was observed in naïve and resistant cells. Despite modified signalling responses, both RB+ and RB− resistant cells responded to combination treatment despite some reduction in relative efficacy and was effective in vivo in palbociclib-resistant PDX models. Collectively these findings demonstrate that simultaneous inhibition of AKT and ER signalling can be effective in models representing palbociclib resistance despite changes in pathway dependency.