- Smith, Alison E;
- Chan, Stacia;
- Wang, Zhiyong;
- McCloskey, Asako;
- Reilly, Quinn;
- Wang, Jayden Z;
- Patel, Hetika Vora;
- Koshizuka, Keiichi;
- Soifer, Harris S;
- Kessler, Linda;
- Dayoub, Ashley;
- Villaflor, Victoria;
- Adkins, Douglas R;
- Bruce, Justine Y;
- Ho, Alan L;
- Perez, Cesar A;
- Hanna, Glenn J;
- Hernandez, Amaya Gasco;
- Saunders, Andrew;
- Dale, Stephen;
- Gutkind, J Silvio;
- Burrows, Francis;
- Malik, Shivani
Outcomes for patients with recurrent/metastatic (R/M) head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) are poor, with median overall survival (OS) ranging from 6 to 18 months. For those who progress on standard-of-care (chemo)immunotherapy, treatment options are limited, necessitating the development of rational therapeutic strategies. Toward this end, we targeted the key HNSCC drivers PI3K-mTOR and HRAS via the combination of tipifarnib, a farnesyltransferase (FTase) inhibitor, and alpelisib, a PI3Kα inhibitor, in multiple molecularly defined subsets of HNSCC. Tipifarnib synergized with alpelisib at the level of mTOR in PI3Kα- or HRAS-dependent HNSCCs, leading to marked cytotoxicity in vitro and tumor regression in vivo. On the basis of these findings, the KURRENT-HN trial was launched to evaluate the effectiveness of this combination in PIK3CA-mutant/amplified and/or HRAS-overexpressing R/M HNSCC. Preliminary evidence supports the clinical activity of this molecular biomarker-driven combination therapy. Combined alpelisib and tipifarnib has potential to benefit >45% of patients with R/M HNSCC. By blocking feedback reactivation of mTORC1, tipifarnib may prevent adaptive resistance to additional targeted therapies, enhancing their clinical utility.
Significance
The mechanistically designed, biomarker-matched strategy of combining alpelisib and tipifarnib is efficacious in PIK3CA- and HRAS-dysregulated head and neck squamous carcinoma and could improve outcomes for many patients with recurrent, metastatic disease. See related commentary by Lee et al., p. 3162.