A hydroxyamidine chemotype has been discovered as a key pharmacophore in novel inhibitors of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO). Optimization led to the identification of 5l, which is a potent (HeLa IC(50) = 19 nM) competitive inhibitor of IDO. Testing of 5l in mice demonstrated pharmacodynamic inhibition of IDO, as measured by decreased kynurenine levels (>50%) in plasma and dose dependent efficacy in mice bearing GM-CSF-secreting B16 melanoma tumors.
A data-centric medicinal
chemistry approach led to the invention
of a potent and selective IDO1 inhibitor 4f, INCB24360
(epacadostat). The molecular structure of INCB24360 contains several
previously unknown or underutilized functional groups in drug substances,
including a hydroxyamidine, furazan, bromide, and sulfamide. These
moieties taken together in a single structure afford a compound that
falls outside of “drug-like” space. Nevertheless, the in vitro ADME data is consistent with the good cell permeability
and oral bioavailability observed in all species (rat, dog, monkey)
tested. The extensive intramolecular hydrogen bonding observed in
the small molecule crystal structure of 4f is believed
to significantly contribute to the observed permeability and PK. Epacadostat
in combination with anti-PD1 mAb pembrolizumab is currently being
studied in a phase 3 clinical trial in patients with unresectable
or metastatic melanoma.
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