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Featured researches published by Ian Taylor.


Cancer Research | 2004

BAY 43-9006 Exhibits Broad Spectrum Oral Antitumor Activity and Targets the RAF/MEK/ERK Pathway and Receptor Tyrosine Kinases Involved in Tumor Progression and Angiogenesis

Scott Wilhelm; Christopher Carter; LiYa Tang; Dean Wilkie; Angela McNabola; Hong Rong; Charles Chen; Xiaomei Zhang; Patrick W. Vincent; Mark McHugh; Yichen Cao; Jaleel Shujath; Susan Gawlak; Deepa Eveleigh; Bruce R. Rowley; Li Liu; Lila Adnane; Mark Lynch; Daniel Auclair; Ian Taylor; Rich Gedrich; Andrei Voznesensky; Bernd Riedl; Leonard E. Post; Gideon Bollag; Pamela Trail

The RAS/RAF signaling pathway is an important mediator of tumor cell proliferation and angiogenesis. The novel bi-aryl urea BAY 43-9006 is a potent inhibitor of Raf-1, a member of the RAF/MEK/ERK signaling pathway. Additional characterization showed that BAY 43-9006 suppresses both wild-type and V599E mutant BRAF activity in vitro. In addition, BAY 43-9006 demonstrated significant activity against several receptor tyrosine kinases involved in neovascularization and tumor progression, including vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR)-2, VEGFR-3, platelet-derived growth factor receptor β, Flt-3, and c-KIT. In cellular mechanistic assays, BAY 43-9006 demonstrated inhibition of the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway in colon, pancreatic, and breast tumor cell lines expressing mutant KRAS or wild-type or mutant BRAF, whereas non–small-cell lung cancer cell lines expressing mutant KRAS were insensitive to inhibition of the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway by BAY 43-9006. Potent inhibition of VEGFR-2, platelet-derived growth factor receptor β, and VEGFR-3 cellular receptor autophosphorylation was also observed for BAY 43-9006. Once daily oral dosing of BAY 43-9006 demonstrated broad-spectrum antitumor activity in colon, breast, and non–small-cell lung cancer xenograft models. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated a close association between inhibition of tumor growth and inhibition of the extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs) 1/2 phosphorylation in two of three xenograft models examined, consistent with inhibition of the RAF/MEK/ERK pathway in some but not all models. Additional analyses of microvessel density and microvessel area in the same tumor sections using antimurine CD31 antibodies demonstrated significant inhibition of neovascularization in all three of the xenograft models. These data demonstrate that BAY 43-9006 is a novel dual action RAF kinase and VEGFR inhibitor that targets tumor cell proliferation and tumor angiogenesis.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2006

Phase II Study of Sorafenib in Patients With Advanced Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Ghassan K. Abou-Alfa; Lawrence Schwartz; S. Ricci; Dino Amadori; Armando Santoro; A. Figer; Jacques De Greve; Jean Yves Douillard; Chetan D. Lathia; Brian Schwartz; Ian Taylor; M. Moscovici; Leonard B. Saltz

PURPOSEnThis phase II study of sorafenib, an oral multikinase inhibitor that targets Raf kinase and receptor tyrosine kinases, assessed efficacy, toxicity, pharmacokinetics, and biomarkers in advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients.nnnMETHODSnPatients with inoperable HCC, no prior systemic treatment, and Child-Pugh (CP) A or B, received continuous, oral sorafenib 400 mg bid in 4-week cycles. Tumor response was assessed every two cycles using modified WHO criteria. Sorafenib pharmacokinetics were measured in plasma samples. Biomarker analysis included phosphorylated extracellular signal regulated kinase (pERK) in pretreatment biopsies (immunohistochemistry) and blood-cell RNA expression patterns in selected patients.nnnRESULTSnOf 137 patients treated (male, 71%; median age, 69 years), 72% had CP A, and 28% had CP B. On the basis of independent assessment, three (2.2%) patients achieved a partial response, eight (5.8%) had a minor response, and 46 (33.6%) had stable disease for at least 16 weeks. Investigator-assessed median time to progression (TTP) was 4.2 months, and median overall survival was 9.2 months. Grade 3/4 drug-related toxicities included fatigue (9.5%), diarrhea (8.0%), and hand-foot skin reaction (5.1%). There were no significant pharmacokinetic differences between CP A and B patients. Pretreatment tumor pERK levels correlated with TTP. A panel of 18 expressed genes was identified that distinguished nonprogressors from progressors with an estimated 100% accuracy.nnnCONCLUSIONnAlthough single-agent sorafenib has modest efficacy in HCC, the manageable toxicity and mechanisms of action support a role for combination regimens with other anticancer agents.


Methods in Enzymology | 2006

Sorafenib (BAY 43‐9006, Nexavar®), a Dual‐Action Inhibitor That Targets RAF/MEK/ERK Pathway in Tumor Cells and Tyrosine Kinases VEGFR/PDGFR in Tumor Vasculature

Lila Adnane; Pamela Trail; Ian Taylor; Scott Wilhelm

Activating mutations in Ras and B-RAF were identified in several human cancers. In addition, several receptor tyrosine kinases, acting upstream of Ras, were found either mutated or overexpressed in human tumors. Because oncogenic activation of the Ras/RAF pathway may lead to a sustained proliferative signal resulting in tumor growth and progression, inhibition of this pathway represents an attractive approach for cancer drug discovery. A novel class of biaryl urea that inhibits C-RAF kinase was discovered using a combination of medicinal and combinatorial chemistry approaches. This effort culminated in the identification of the clinical candidate BAY 43-9006 (Sorafenib, Nexavar), which has recently been approved by the FDA for advanced renal cell carcinoma in phase III clinical trials. Sorafenib inhibited the kinase activity of both C-RAF and B-RAF (wild type and V600E mutant). It inhibited MEK and ERK phosphorylation in various cancer cell lines and tumor xenografts and exhibited potent oral antitumor activity in a broad spectrum of human tumor xenograft models. Further characterization of sorafenib revealed that this molecule was a multikinase inhibitor that targeted the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor family (VEGFR-2 and VEGFR-3) and platelet-derived growth factor receptor family (PDGFR-beta and Kit), which play key roles in tumor progression and angiogenesis. Thus, sorafenib may inhibit tumor growth by a dual mechanism, acting either directly on the tumor (through inhibition of Raf and Kit signaling) and/or on tumor angiogenesis (through inhibition of VEGFR and PDGFR signaling). In phase I and phase II clinical trials, sorafenib showed limited side effects and, more importantly, disease stabilization. This agent is currently being evaluated in phase III clinical trials in renal cell and hepatocellular carcinomas.


Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 2000

HTS in the new millennium: The role of pharmacology and flexibility

James A. Landro; Ian Taylor; William G. Stirtan; David G. Osterman; James Kristie; Edward J. Hunnicutt; Peter Rae; Paul M. Sweetnam

Over the past decade, high throughput screening (HTS) has become the focal point for discovery programs within the pharmaceutical industry. The role of this discipline has been and remains the rapid and efficient identification of lead chemical matter within chemical libraries for therapeutics development. Recent advances in molecular and computational biology, i.e., genomic sequencing and bioinformatics, have resulted in the announcement of publication of the first draft of the human genome. While much work remains before a complete and accurate genomic map will be available, there can be no doubt that the number of potential therapeutic intervention points will increase dramatically, thereby increasing the workload of early discovery groups. One current drug discovery paradigm integrates genomics, protein biosciences and HTS in establishing what the authors refer to as the gene-to-screen process. Adoption of the gene-to-screen paradigm results in a dramatic increase in the efficiency of the process of converting a novel gene coding for a putative enzymatic or receptor function into a robust and pharmacologically relevant high throughput screen. This article details aspects of the identification of lead chemical matter from HTS. Topics discussed include portfolio composition (molecular targets amenable to small molecule drug discovery), screening file content, assay formats and plating densities, and the impact of instrumentation on the ability of HTS to identify lead chemical matter.


Archive | 2004

Expression profiles for colon cancer and methods of use

Deepa Eveleigh; Douglas Bigwood; Ian Taylor


Archive | 2006

Urea compounds useful in the treatment of cancer

Roger A. Smith; Holia N. Hatoum-Mokdad; Louis David Cantin; Donald Bierer; Wenlang Fu; Dhanapalan Nagarathnam; Gaetan Ladouceur; Yamin Wang; Herbert Ogutu; Scot Wilhelm; Ian Taylor; Sanjeeva P. Reddy; Richard Gedrich; Christopher A. Carter; Aaron Schmitt; Xiaomei Zhang


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2007

SAR of a novel 'Anthranilamide Like' series of VEGFR-2, multi protein kinase inhibitors for the treatment of cancer.

Philip Wickens; Harold Kluender; Julie A. Dixon; Catherine Brennan; Furahi Achebe; Antonella Bacchiocchi; Don Bankston; Donald Bierer; Michael Brands; Debbie Braun; Melissa S. Brown; Chih-Yuan Chuang; Jacques Dumas; Istvan Enyedy; Gloria Hofilena; Zhenqiu Hong; Tim Housley; Benjamin Jones; Uday Khire; Charles Kreiman; Ellalahewage Kumarasinghe; Timothy B. Lowinger; Ronda Ott-Morgan; Louise Perkins; Barton Phillips; Robert W. Schoenleber; William J. Scott; Ryan Sheeler; Aniko Redman; Xiuying Sun


Archive | 2010

IMMUNOHISTOCHEMICAL METHODS FOR MONITORING pERK LEVELS

Ian Taylor; Scott Wilhelm


Archive | 2006

Composes de l'uree utilises dans le traitement du cancer

Donald Bierer; Louis-David Cantin; Christopher A. Carter; Wenlang Fu; Richard Gedrich; Holia N. Hatoum-Mokdad; Gaetan Ladouceur; Dhanapalan Nagarathnam; Herbert Ogutu; Sanjeeva P. Reddy; Aaron Schmitt; Roger A. Smith; Ian Taylor; Yamin Wang; Scott Wilhelm; Xiaomei Zhang


Archive | 2004

Profils d'expression genique et leurs methodes d'utilisation

Douglas Bigwood; Nicole R Pauloski; Ian Taylor

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