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GCPII Inihibitors for the treatment of chemotherapy-induced neuropathy

$365,161R01FY2016CANIH

Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD

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Abstract

DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a common toxicity associated with anticancer treatment which can lead to early discontinuation of therapy and/or severely affect quality of life. Little is known about the mechanisms responsible for CIPN, and despite many CIPN therapeutic clinical trials, no standard evidence-based treatment exists. Excessive glutamate transmission has been implicated in the pathogenesis of peripheral neuropathy and neuropathic pain. Inhibition of the glial enzyme glutamate carboxypeptidase II (GCPII) has been shown to selectively dampen excessive glutamate transmission and alleviate neuropathic pain and protect peripheral nerves from the functional and histological deficits induced by chemotherapeutic agents. Based on these data, an orally bioavailable, thiol-based GCPII inhibitor was taken into clinical studies. Although the inhibitor was well-tolerated in Phase 1, subsequent immunological toxicities observed in GLP primate studies halted its development. Importantly the toxicity was not due to the GCPII mechanism, but rather due to the thiol moiety in the compound. As a class, thiol drugs have a risk of inducing hypersensitivity reactions. We now outline an iterative drug discovery plan to identify clinically viable non thiol GCPII inhibitors to test the hypothesis that this mechanism will provide therapeutic benefit to CIPN patients. Our iterative drug discovery plan includes a systematic zinc binding group replacement strategy, extensive in vitro drug-ability assessments, drug metabolism, in vivo pharmacokinetics, biomarker strategies, and evaluation of compounds in paclitaxel- and oxaliplatin-induced neuropathy and nerve crush efficacy experiments. Active compounds emerging from these efforts will be ready for IND enabling studies and ultimately clinical investigation in CIPN patients.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →