Distant Brain Metastases in Cutaneous Melanoma May Be Mitigated With Multiple Pathway Inhibitors
Source: Doc Wire News, April 2025
Effective therapies are still urgently needed for patients with brain metastases from cutaneous melanoma. Using preclinical mouse models, researchers are investigating the role of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) in distant cutaneous melanoma metastases and the pharmacologic inhibition of FAK, both alone and in combination with rapidly accelerated fibrosarcoma/mitogen-activated protein kinase (RAF/MEK) pathway inhibition.
Results were published in Cell Reports Medicine.
The researchers used YUMM3.2 cells that express BRAF, which was the specific cutaneous melanoma variant target. To test the efficacy of FAK inhibition alone, the cells were treated with increasing doses of either a defacitinib surrogate (VS-4718) or avutometinib for 72 hours, and confluence was assayed every 2 hours. To determine the efficacy of FAK/RAF/MEK inhibition, cells were treated with different concentrations of the VS-4718 plus avutometinib.
“The cells were assayed using the ATPlite cell viability assay to assess drug synergy or antagonism using multiple methods, including the Chou-Talalay combination index (CI) where CI < 1, = 1, and > 1 indicates synergism, additive effect, or antagonism, respectively…Bliss and zero interaction potency (Zip) methods were also used where values > 0 indicate synergism. The drug combination was synergistic at several dose levels as assessed by CI, Bliss, and Zip,” the researchers noted.