Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)

A gene that is commonly rearranged in lung cancer. This is an actionable mutation

Gilteritinib for lorlatinib-resistant ALK NSCLC

Partner Awards
Grant title (if any)
ALK Positive/LUNGevity Lung Cancer Research Awards
Angel Qin, MD
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor
MI

Lorlatinib is currently the only approved treatment for patients with ALK-positive NSCLC whose cancers have progressed on prior ALK drugs, and for those whose tumors develop resistance, there is a lack of other treatment options other than chemotherapy. In this study, Dr. Qin will evaluate a novel drug called gilteritinib as a treatment in patients with ALK-positive NSCLC whose tumors have developed a resistance to lorlatinib.

 

Development of ALK-specific TCR-T cells for the eradication of ALK+ NSCLC

Partner Awards
Grant title (if any)
ALK Positive/LUNGevity Lung Cancer Research Awards
Roberto Chiarle, MD
Boston Children’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School
Boston
MA

In this project, Dr. Chiarle and his team will generate T cells that have engineered receptors, called TCR receptors (TCR-T cells), that will selectively target and attack the ALK protein that is expressed by tumor cells. Generation of such cells could be a powerful tool to eradicate ALK+ lung cancer cells and form the basis of a TCR-T cell-based clinical trial for patients with TKI-resistant ALK+ NSCLC.

Defining and novel therapeutic targeting of ALK fusion protein granules

Partner Awards
Grant title (if any)
ALK Positive/LUNGevity Lung Cancer Research Awards
Trever Bivona, MD, PhD
University of California, San Francisco
San Francisco
CA

Currently available ALK inhibitors are an effective treatment for lung cancer, but tumors can development treatment resistance. In this project, Dr. Bivona will explore a novel way to treat ALK-positive lung cancer by targeting “membraneless cytoplasmic protein granules,” a new mechanism of signaling in ALK-positive lung cancer. His team will use precision medicine approaches that are complementary to current ALK inhibitors and that could improve their efficacy as well as quality of life for patients. 

Overcoming ALK resistance with covalent cysteine-reactive inhibitors

Partner Awards
A. John Iafrate, MD. PhD
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston
MA
Liron Bar-Peled, PhD
Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Boston
MA

Overcoming bypass signaling to enhance clinical responses in ALK-positive lung cancer

Partner Awards
Ibiayi Dagogo-Jack, MD
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston
MA

Phase 1 first in-human clinical trial with a therapeutic ALK vaccine in patients with ALK+ NSCLC

Partner Awards
Grant title (if any)
ALK Positive/LUNGevity Lung Cancer Research Awards
Mark Awad, MD, PhD
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Boston
MA
Roberto Chiarle, MD
Harvard University
Cambridge
MA

Targeting the Complement Pathway in ALK Positive Lung Cancer

Partner Awards
This grant was funded by ALK Positive
Raphael Nemenoff, PhD
University of Colorado Denver
Aurora
CO

Overcoming Innate Immune Resistance in ALK-Rearranged Lung Cancer

Partner Awards
This grant was funded by ALK Positive
Justin Gainor, MD
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston
MA

Characterization of Anti-ALK Immunologic Responses in ALK-Positive NSCLC

Partner Awards
This grant was funded by ALK Positive
Mark Awad, MD, PhD
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Boston
MA

Identifying Tumor Genomic Changes in Lung Cancers

Targeted Therapeutics Research Award
This grant was funded in part by Upstage Lung Cancer
Rebecca Heist, MD, MPH
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston
MA
Anthony Iafrate, MD
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston
MA
William Pao, MD, PhD
Vanderbilt University
Nashville
TN

Targeted therapies have shown great promise. However, up to 40% of patients with lung cancer do not test positive for a known target. Dr. Rebecca Heist is studying this group of patients and using DNA sequencing technology to identify novel targets for treatment.