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Dive into the research topics where Bruce D. Cohen is active.

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Featured researches published by Bruce D. Cohen.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2005

Combination Therapy Enhances the Inhibition of Tumor Growth with the Fully Human Anti–Type 1 Insulin-Like Growth Factor Receptor Monoclonal Antibody CP-751,871

Bruce D. Cohen; Deborah A. Baker; Catherine Soderstrom; George T. Tkalcevic; Ann Marie Rossi; Penny Miller; Mark W. Tengowski; Faye Wang; Antonio Gualberto; Jean Beebe; James D. Moyer

Purpose: The insulin-like growth factor (IGF) signaling pathway is implicated in cellular mitogenesis, angiogenesis, tumor cell survival, and tumorigenesis. Inhibition of this pathway results in decreased cell growth, inhibition of tumor formation in animal models, and increased apoptosis in cells treated with cytotoxic chemotherapy. We generated and characterized a human monoclonal antibody that targeted the IGF receptor. Experimental Design: By use of XenoMouse technology, we generated CP-751,871, a fully human IgG2 antibody with high affinity (Kd = 1.5 nmol/L) for human IGF-1R and evaluated its biological, pharmacologic, and antitumor properties. Results: This antibody blocks binding of IGF-1 to its receptor (IC50 1.8 nmol/L), IGF-1-induced receptor autophosphorylation (IC50 0.42 nmol/L) and induced the down-regulation of IGF-1R in vitro and in tumor xenografts. The extent of IGF-1R down-regulation in vivo was proportional to CP-751,871 concentrations in the serum of tumor-bearing mice. Pharmacokinetic profiles in cynomolgus monkeys indicated a close to linear increase of exposure following i.v. dosing of antibody in the range of 3 to 100 mg/kg. CP-751,871 showed significant antitumor activity both as a single agent and in combination with Adriamycin, 5-fluorouracil, or tamoxifen in multiple tumor models. A biomarker assay was developed to establish the relationship between circulating antibody concentrations and down-regulation of IGF-1R in peripheral blood cells. The concentration of CP-751,871 required to down-regulate 50% of IGF-1R on peripheral blood cells was 0.3 nmol/L. Conclusion: These data suggest that inhibition of the IGF cascade by use of this monoclonal antibody may be of clinical benefit in the treatment of human cancers.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2010

PF-03814735, an Orally Bioavailable Small Molecule Aurora Kinase Inhibitor for Cancer Therapy

Jitesh P. Jani; Vincent Bernardo; Samit Kumar Bhattacharya; David Briere; Bruce D. Cohen; Kevin Coleman; James G. Christensen; Erling O. Emerson; Amy B. Jakowski; Kenneth E. Hook; Gerrit Los; James D. Moyer; Ingrid Pruimboom-Brees; Leslie R. Pustilnik; Ann Marie Rossi; Stefan J. Steyn; Chunyan Su; Konstantinos Tsaparikos; Donn G. Wishka; Kwansik Yoon; John Jakubczak

The Aurora family of highly related serine/threonine kinases plays a key role in the regulation of mitosis. Aurora1 and Aurora2 play important but distinct roles in the G2 and M phases of the cell cycle and are essential for proper chromosome segregation and cell division. Overexpression and amplification of Aurora2 have been reported in different tumor types, including breast, colon, pancreatic, ovarian, and gastric cancer. PF-03814735 is a novel, potent, orally bioavailable, reversible inhibitor of both Aurora1 and Aurora2 kinases that is currently in phase I clinical trials for the treatment of advanced solid tumors. In intact cells, the inhibitory activity of PF-03814735 on the Aurora1 and Aurora2 kinases reduces levels of phospho-Aurora1, phosphohistone H3, and phospho-Aurora2. PF-03814735 produces a block in cytokinesis, resulting in inhibition of cell proliferation and the formation of polyploid multinucleated cells. Although PF-03814735 produces significant inhibition of several other protein kinases, the predominant biochemical effects in cellular assays are consistent with inhibition of Aurora kinases. Once-daily oral administration of PF-03814735 to mice bearing human xenograft tumors produces a reduction in phosphohistone H3 in tumors at doses that are tolerable and that result in significant inhibition of tumor growth. The combination of PF-03814735 and docetaxel in xenograft mouse tumor models shows additive tumor growth inhibition. These results support the clinical evaluation of PF-03814735 in cancer patients. Mol Cancer Ther; 9(4); 883–94. ©2010 AACR.


mAbs | 2012

Biochemical and pharmacological characterization of human c-Met neutralizing monoclonal antibody CE-355621.

Neil R. Michaud; Jitesh P. Jani; Stephen M. Hillerman; Konstantinos Tsaparikos; Elsa G. Barbacci-Tobin; Elisabeth Knauth; Henry Putz; Mary Campbell; George A. Karam; Boris A. Chrunyk; David F. Gebhard; Larry L. Green; Jinghai J. Xu; Margaret C. Dunn; Tim M. Coskran; Jean-Martin Lapointe; Bruce D. Cohen; Kevin Coleman; Vahe Bedian; Patrick W. Vincent; Shama Kajiji; Stefan J. Steyn; Gary Borzillo; Gerrit Los

The c-Met proto-oncogene is a multifunctional receptor tyrosine kinase that is stimulated by its ligand, hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), to induce cell growth, motility and morphogenesis. Dysregulation of c-Met function, through mutational activation or overexpression, has been observed in many types of cancer and is thought to contribute to tumor growth and metastasis by affecting mitogenesis, invasion, and angiogenesis. We identified human monoclonal antibodies that bind to the extracellular domain of c-Met and inhibit tumor growth by interfering with ligand-dependent c-Met activation. We identified antibodies representing four independent epitope classes that inhibited both ligand binding and ligand-dependent activation of c-Met in A549 cells. In cells, the antibodies antagonized c-Met function by blocking receptor activation and by subsequently inducing downregulation of the receptor, translating to phenotypic effects in soft agar growth and tubular morphogenesis assays. Further characterization of the antibodies in vivo revealed significant inhibition of c-Met activity (≥ 80% lasting for 72–96 h) in excised tumors corresponded to tumor growth inhibition in multiple xenograft tumor models. Several of the antibodies identified inhibited the growth of tumors engineered to overexpress human HGF and human c-Met (S114 NIH 3T3) when grown subcutaneously in athymic mice. Furthermore, lead candidate antibody CE-355621 inhibited the growth of U87MG human glioblastoma and GTL-16 gastric xenografts by up to 98%. The findings support published pre-clinical and clinical data indicating that targeting c-Met with human monoclonal antibodies is a promising therapeutic approach for the treatment of cancer.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Discovery and synthesis of novel 4-aminopyrrolopyrimidine Tie-2 kinase inhibitors for the treatment of solid tumors.

Jean Beebe; Martin A. Berliner; Vincent Bernardo; Merin Boehm; Gary Borzillo; Tracey Clark; Bruce D. Cohen; Richard D. Connell; Heather N. Frost; Deborah Gordon; William M. Hungerford; Shefali Kakar; Aaron Kanter; Nandell F. Keene; Elizabeth Knauth; Susan Deborah Lagreca; Yong Lu; Louis Martinez-Alsina; Matthew A. Marx; Joel Morris; Nandini Chaturbhai Patel; Doug Savage; Cathy Soderstrom; Carl Thompson; George T. Tkalcevic; Norma Jacqueline Tom; Felix Vajdos; James J. Valentine; Patrick W. Vincent; Matthew D. Wessel

The synthesis and biological evaluation of novel Tie-2 kinase inhibitors are presented. Based on the pyrrolopyrimidine chemotype, several new series are described, including the benzimidazole series by linking a benzimidazole to the C5-position of the 4-amino-pyrrolopyrimidine core and the ketophenyl series synthesized by incorporating a ketophenyl group to the C5-position. Medicinal chemistry efforts led to potent Tie-2 inhibitors. Compound 15, a ketophenyl pyrrolopyrimidine urea analog with improved physicochemical properties, demonstrated favorable in vitro attributes as well as dose responsive and robust oral tumor growth inhibition in animal models.


Archive | 2001

Antibodies to insulin-like growth factor i receptor

Bruce D. Cohen; Jean Beebe; Penelope E Miller; James D. Moyer; Jose Corvalan; Michael Gallo


Cancer Research | 2005

Antiangiogenic and Antitumor Activity of a Selective PDGFR Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor, CP-673,451

W. Gregory Roberts; Pamela Whalen; Erik Soderstrom; Garrett Moraski; Joseph P. Lyssikatos; Huifen-F. Wang; Beth Cooper; Deborah A. Baker; Douglas Savage; Deepak Dalvie; James A. Atherton; Sherry Ralston; Ruby Anthea Szewc; John Charles Kath; Jing Lin; Cathy Soderstrom; George T. Tkalcevic; Bruce D. Cohen; Vince Pollack; Wayne E. Barth; Will Hungerford; Ethan Ung


Archive | 2004

Modified human IGF-IR antibodies

Bruce D. Cohen; Vahe Bedian


Archive | 2004

Uses of anti-insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor antibodies

Bruce D. Cohen; Vahe Bedian; Mihail Obrocea; Jesus Gomez-Navarro; John Daniel Cusmano; Huifen F. Wang; Deborah J. Guyot; Kelly Lynn Page


Archive | 2005

Combination treatment for non-hematologic malignancies using an anti-IGF-1R antibody

Antonio Gualberto; Bruce D. Cohen; Carrie Lynn Melvin; Maria Luisa Roberts


Archive | 2005

Combination treatment for non-hematologic malignancies

Antonio Gualberto; Bruce D. Cohen; Carrie Lynn Melvin; M. Luisa Roberts

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