Abstract

Abstract Current clinical poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors target both PARP1 and PARP2 and they all cause clinical cytopenias with varying severity. Understanding the mechanism underlying the hematological toxicity of these agents is key for the rational design of a best-in-class molecule with greater therapeutic potential, both as monotherapy and in combination with chemotherapy. We validated the rat as a physiologically competent translational model to investigate PARP inhibitor-driven hematological toxicity. Here we demonstrate that in comparison with a representative PARP1/2 inhibitor, olaparib, the novel highly potent PARP1-selective inhibitor and trapper, AZD5305, does not cause hematological toxicity as a monotherapy in pre-clinical rat models at predicted clinically efficacious exposures. Thus, monotherapy toxicity of PARP1/2 inhibitors likely depends on PARP2 inhibition. Next, we proceeded to investigate whether PARP1-selective inhibition would be better tolerated in chemotherapy combinations than PARP1/2 inhibition. We performed a rat in vivo study comparing daily olaparib or daily AZD5305 at matched exposures in combination with one cycle of intravenous carboplatin for 14 days. We show that olaparib and PARP1-selective AZD5305 cause comparable exacerbation of carboplatin-induced peripheral blood effects implicating PARP1 inhibition in combination-driven hematological toxicity. Importantly however, AZD5305+carboplatin showed improved hematological tolerability over olaparib+carboplatin because peripheral reticulocytes and bone marrow erythroid precursor cells recover in the presence of continuous AZD5305 but not in the presence of continuous olaparib. Importantly, this differentiation was maintained in a subsequent rat in vivo study, where daily olaparib or daily AZD5305 were combined with two three-weekly cycles of a higher dose of carboplatin to more closely mimic clinical protocol. AZD5305+carboplatin was associated with a more rapid recovery of reticulocytes, red blood cells and hemoglobin following both cycles of carboplatin. In contrast, olaparib+carboplatin was associated with a slower recovery resulting in a more sustained reduction in red cells and hemoglobin during both the first and second cycle of carboplatin. Thus, in rodents the novel potent PARP1-selective inhibitor AZD5305 has improved hematological tolerability over dual PARP1/2 inhibitors, both as a monotherapy and in carboplatin combinations. Citation Format: Sonja J. Gill, Ruth Macdonald, Carmen Pin, Rob Collins, Emilyanne Leonard, Gareth Maglennon, Andy Pike, Peter Cotton, Glen Hawthorne, Jordan Pugh, Rebecca Sargeant, Daniel Sutton, James Atkinson, Stewart Jones, Sarah Chinery, Mark Anderton. The novel PARP1-selective inhibitor AZD5305 has reduced hematological toxicity when compared to PARP1/2 inhibitors in pre-clinical models [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2021; 2021 Apr 10-15 and May 17-21. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(13_Suppl):Abstract nr 1374.

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