Targeted and selective Bcl-2 inhibitors that have been in development or are currently in the clinic include:
Oblimersen An antisense
oligonucleotide drug,
oblimersen (G3139), was developed by
Genta Incorporated to target Bcl-2. An
antisense DNA or RNA strand is non-coding and complementary to the coding strand (which is the template for producing respectively RNA or protein). An
antisense drug is a short sequence of modified DNA that hybridises with and inactivates mRNA, preventing the
protein from being formed. Human
lymphoma cell proliferation (with t(14;18) translocation) could be inhibited by
antisense oligonucleotide targeted at the start
codon region of Bcl-2
mRNA.
In vitro studies led to the identification of Genasense, which is complementary to the first 6 codons of Bcl-2 mRNA. These showed successful results in Phase I/II trials for lymphoma. A large Phase III trial was launched in 2004. As of 2016, the drug had not been approved and its developer was out of business.
ABT-737 and navitoclax (ABT-263) In the mid-2000s,
Abbott Laboratories developed a novel inhibitor of Bcl-2,
Bcl-xL and Bcl-w, known as
ABT-737. This compound is part of a group of BH3 mimetic small molecule inhibitors (SMI) that target these Bcl-2 family proteins, but not A1 or
Mcl-1. ABT-737 is superior to previous BCL-2 inhibitors given its higher affinity for Bcl-2, Bcl-xL and Bcl-w.
In vitro studies showed that primary cells from patients with B-cell malignancies are sensitive to ABT-737. In animal models, it improves survival, causes tumor regression and cures a high percentage of mice. In preclinical studies utilizing
patient xenografts, ABT-737 showed efficacy for treating lymphoma and other blood cancers. Because of its unfavorable pharmacologic properties ABT-737 is not appropriate for clinical trials, while its orally
bioavailable derivative
navitoclax (ABT-263) has similar activity on
small cell lung cancer (SCLC) cell lines and has entered clinical trials. While clinical responses with navitoclax were promising, mechanistic dose-limiting
thrombocytopenia was observed in patients under treatment due to Bcl-xL inhibition in
platelets.
Venetoclax (ABT-199) Due to dose-limiting thrombocytopenia of navitoclax as a result of Bcl-xL inhibition,
Abbvie successfully developed the highly selective inhibitor
venetoclax (ABT-199), which inhibits Bcl-2, but not Bcl-xL or Bcl-w. Clinical trials studied the effects of venetoclax, a BH3-mimetic drug designed to block the function of the Bcl-2 protein, on patients with
chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Good responses have been reported and thrombocytopenia was no longer observed. A phase 3 trial started in Dec 2015. It was approved by the
US FDA in April 2016 as a second-line treatment for CLL associated with 17-p deletion. This was the first FDA approval of a BCL-2 inhibitor.
Sonrotoclax (BGB-11417) Venetoclax drug resistance has been noted with the G101V mutation in BCL-2 observed in relapsing patients.
Sonrotoclax shows greater tumor growth inhibition in hematologic tumor models than venetoclax and inhibits venetoclax-resistant BCL-2 variants. Sonrotoclax is under clinical investigation as a monotherapy and in combination with other anticancer agents.
Lisaftoclax (APG-2575) Lisaftoclax is being developed by Ascentage Pharma. == Interactions ==