作者
James S. Scott,Tom Moss,Amber Balazs,Bernard Barlaam,J. Breed,Rodrigo J. Carbajo,Elisabetta Chiarparin,Paul R. J. Davey,Oona Delpuech,Stephen E. Fawell,David I. Fisher,Sladjana Gagrica,Eric T. Gangl,Tyler Grebe,Ryan Greenwood,Sudhir M. Hande,Holia Hatoum‐Mokdad,Kara Herlihy,Samantha Jane Hughes,Thomas A. Hunt,Hoan K. Huynh,Sophie Janbon,Tony Johnson,Stefan Kavanagh,Teresa Klinowska,Mandy Lawson,Andrew Lister,Stacey Marden,Dermot F. McGinnity,Christopher J. Morrow,J. Willem M. Nissink,Daniel H. O’Donovan,Bo Peng,Radosław Polański,Darren Stead,S.P. Stokes,Kumar Thakur,Scott Throner,Michael Tucker,Jeffrey Varnes,Haixia Wang,David M. Wilson,Dedong Wu,Ye Wu,Bin Yang,Wenzhan Yang
摘要
Herein we report the optimization of a series of tricyclic indazoles as selective estrogen receptor degraders (SERD) and antagonists for the treatment of ER+ breast cancer. Structure based design together with systematic investigation of each region of the molecular architecture led to the identification of N-[1-(3-fluoropropyl)azetidin-3-yl]-6-[(6S,8R)-8-methyl-7-(2,2,2-trifluoroethyl)-6,7,8,9-tetrahydro-3H-pyrazolo[4,3-f]isoquinolin-6-yl]pyridin-3-amine (28). This compound was demonstrated to be a highly potent SERD that showed a pharmacological profile comparable to fulvestrant in its ability to degrade ERα in both MCF-7 and CAMA-1 cell lines. A stringent control of lipophilicity ensured that 28 had favorable physicochemical and preclinical pharmacokinetic properties for oral administration. This, combined with demonstration of potent in vivo activity in mouse xenograft models, resulted in progression of this compound, also known as AZD9833, into clinical trials.