Helen T. Lee
Pfizer
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Publication
Featured researches published by Helen T. Lee.
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2008
Andrea J. Gonzales; Kenneth E. Hook; Irene W. Althaus; Paul A. Ellis; Erin Trachet; Amy Delaney; Patricia J. Harvey; Teresa Ellis; Danielle M. Amato; James M. Nelson; David W. Fry; Tong Zhu; Cho-Ming Loi; Stephen A. Fakhoury; Kevin Matthew Schlosser; R. Thomas Winters; Jessica Elizabeth Reed; Alex J. Bridges; Daniel J. Lettiere; Deborah A. Baker; Jianxin Yang; Helen T. Lee; Haile Tecle; Patrick W. Vincent
Signaling through the erbB receptor family of tyrosine kinases contributes to the proliferation, differentiation, migration, and survival of a variety of cell types. Abnormalities in members of this receptor family have been shown to play a role in oncogenesis, thus making them attractive targets for anticancer treatments. PF-00299804 is a second-generation irreversible pan-erbB receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor currently in phase I clinical trials. PF-00299804 is believed to irreversibly inhibit erbB tyrosine kinase activity through binding at the ATP site and covalent modification of nucleophilic cysteine residues in the catalytic domains of erbB family members. Oral administration of PF-00299804 causes significant antitumor activity, including marked tumor regressions in a variety of human tumor xenograft models that express and/or overexpress erbB family members or contain the double mutation (L858R/T790M) in erbB1 (EGFR) associated with resistance to gefitinib and erlotinib. Furthermore, PF-00299804 shows exceptional distribution to human tumor xenografts and excellent pharmacokinetic properties across species. [Mol Cancer Ther 2008;7(7):1880–9]
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016
Jeff B. Smaill; Andrea J. Gonzales; Julie A. Spicer; Helen T. Lee; Jessica Elizabeth Reed; Irene W. Althaus; Tong Zhu; Shannon L. Black; Adrian Blaser; William A. Denny; Paul A. Ellis; Stephen A. Fakhoury; Patricia J. Harvey; Ken Hook; Florence O. McCarthy; Brian D. Palmer; Freddy Rivault; Kevin Matthew Schlosser; Teresa Ellis; Andrew M. Thompson; Erin Trachet; R. Thomas Winters; Haile Tecle; Alexander James Bridges
Structure-activity relationships for inhibition of erbB1, erbB2, and erbB4 were determined for a series of quinazoline- and pyrido[3,4-d]pyrimidine-based analogues of the irreversible pan-erbB inhibitor, canertinib. Cyclic amine bearing crotonamides were determined to provide rapid inhibition of cellular erbB1 autophosphorylation and good metabolic stability in liver microsome and hepatocyte assays. The influence of 4-anilino substitution on pan-erbB inhibitory potency was investigated. Several anilines were identified as providing potent, reversible pan-erbB inhibition. Optimum 4- and 6-substituents with known 7-substituents provided preferred irreversible inhibitors for pharmacodynamic testing in vivo. Quinazoline 54 and pyrido[3,4-d]pyrimidine 71 were identified as clearly superior to canertinib. Both compounds possess a piperidinyl crotonamide Michael acceptor and a 3-chloro-4-fluoroaniline, indicating these as optimized 6- and 4-substituents, respectively. Pharmacokinetic comparison of compounds 54 and 71 across three species selected compound 54 as the preferred candidate. Compound 54 (PF-00299804) has been assigned the nomenclature of dacomitinib and is currently under clinical evaluation.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1996
Helen T. Lee; Drago Robert Sliskovic; Joseph A. Picard; Bruce D. Roth; Wendell Wierenga; James Lester Hicks; Richard F. Bousley; Katherine L. Hamelehle; Reynold Homan; Cecilia Speyer; Richard L. Stanfield; Brian R. Krause
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1990
Donald M. Wieland; Karen C. Rosenspire; Gary D. Hutchins; Marcian E. Van Dort; Jill Rothley; Suresh G. Mislankar; Helen T. Lee; Christopher C. Massin; David L. Gildersleeve; Philip S. Sherman; Markus Schwaiger
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1998
Natesan Murugesan; Zhengxiang Gu; Philip D. Stein; Sharon N. Bisaha; Steve Spergel; Ravi Girotra; Ving G. Lee; John Lloyd; Raj N. Misra; Joan B. Schmidt; Arvind Mathur; Leslie Stratton; Yolanda F. Kelly; Eileen Bird; Tom Waldron; Eddie C.-K. Liu; Rongan Zhang; Helen T. Lee; Randy Serafino; Benoni E. Abboa-Offei; Parker D. Mathers; Mary R. Giancarli; Andrea A. Seymour; Maria L. Webb; Suzanne Moreland; Joel C. Barrish; John T. Hunt
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1996
P. M. O'brien; Drago Robert Sliskovic; Joseph A. Picard; Helen T. Lee; Claude F. Purchase; Bruce D. Roth; Andrew David White; Maureen K. Anderson; Sandra Bak Mueller; Thomas Bocan; Richard F. Bousley; Katherine L. Hamelehle; Reynold Homan; Peter Lee; Brian R. Krause; James F. Reindel; Richard L. Stanfield; D. Turluck
BMJ | 1959
Christopher F. Bigge; Alexander James Bridges; Agustin Casimiro-Garcia; Stephen A. Fakhoury; Helen T. Lee; Jessica Elizabeth Reed; Robert Philipp Schaum; Kevin Matthew Schlosser; Hairong Zhou
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 1986
Barry L. Shulkin; Brahm Shapiro; Michael C. Tobes; Shiao-Wei Shen; Donald M. Wieland; Laura Meyers; Helen T. Lee; Neil A. Petry; James C. Sisson; William H. Beierwaltes
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1994
Joseph A. Picard; Richard F. Bousley; Helen T. Lee; Katherine L. Hamelehle; B. R. Krausse; L. L. Minton; Drago R. Sliskovic; Richard L. Stanfield
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2003
Helen T. Lee; Mark A. Massa; Janak Khimchand Padia; William Chester Patt; Peggy Liao; Jason K. Pontrello; Bruce D. Roth; Mark A Spahr; Randy Ramharack