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Broad-spectrum RAS-on inhibitors like daraxonrasib present skin toxicity as a dose-limiting side effect. However, this rash is clinically distinct from that caused by EGFR inhibitors. It is often manageable with brief treatment interruptions, frequently without requiring dose reductions, and patients tend to acclimate to it over time.
Hedgehog inhibitors for basal cell carcinoma cause significant side effects like dysgeusia and muscle cramps. To improve tolerability and long-term adherence, clinicians use practical strategies like scheduled treatment interruptions (e.g., weeks on, weeks off) rather than continuous daily dosing.
A new class of drugs, "RAS on" inhibitors (e.g., daxorarasib), targets the active, GTP-bound state of KRAS. This mechanism is distinct from first-generation "RAS off" inhibitors (e.g., sotorasib) and is designed to treat patients who develop resistance, offering a subsequent line of targeted therapy.
When managing drug-induced rash, recurrence is often caused by restarting therapy before the initial rash has completely resolved. Patients may be eager to resume treatment and minimize lingering symptoms, so clinicians must explicitly educate them on the need for full resolution to prevent a cycle of recurrence.
The next therapeutic frontier for RAS-mutated cancers involves combining multi-selective RAS inhibitors (e.g., daraxonrasib) with mutation-specific inhibitors (e.g., zoldon-rasib). This dual-pronged strategy aims to achieve deeper and more durable pathway inhibition by attacking the target through different mechanisms simultaneously.
While avoiding severe toxicities of older IL-2 drugs, Synthakyne's therapy causes a manageable rash. The company views this as a favorable, on-target effect, indicating the drug is successfully activating the immune system as intended, rather than as a problematic side effect.
The side effect profile of capivasertib is front-loaded. Key toxicities like diarrhea and rash appear quickly, leading to the majority (63%) of drug discontinuations occurring within the first three months. This highlights a critical window for proactive management and patient education to improve adherence.
While the avutometanib/defactinib combination is newly approved for KRAS-mutated ovarian cancer, its significant toxicity profile—causing up to a third of patients to stop treatment—creates a clear clinical need for agents like specific KRAS inhibitors that may offer similar efficacy with better tolerability.
While pan-RAS inhibitors like daraxoracib show broad efficacy irrespective of mutation, allele-specific agents may have fewer side effects and more predictable resistance patterns. This creates a clinical trade-off between immediate applicability and a more tailored, potentially better-tolerated long-term strategy.
Contrary to the assumption that combinations are more toxic, Lenvatinib/Belzutifan showed a different side effect profile, not a worse one, compared to single-agent Cabozantinib. The combo caused more anemia while Cabozantinib caused more diarrhea and skin toxicity, but treatment discontinuation rates were identical at 11% for both arms.
The multi-selective RAS inhibitor daraxonrasib may be effective even in patients without RAS mutations because the underlying RAS signaling pathway can be active regardless of mutational status. This suggests the drug's applicability could extend beyond a strictly biomarker-defined population, complicating traditional targeted therapy paradigms.