
Immunotherapy May Boost KRAS-Targeted Therapy in Pancreatic Cancer
Key Takeaways
- Combining immunotherapy with multi-selective RAS inhibitors prolongs pancreatic cancer suppression in preclinical models, showing promise for future clinical trials.
- Multi-selective inhibitors target the active state of various RAS mutations, potentially overcoming resistance seen with single-target KRAS inhibitors.
A preclinical study offers a foundation for a combination strategy in future clinical trials for KRAS mutations.
Adding immunotherapy to a new type of inhibitor that targets multiple forms of the cancer-causing gene mutation KRAS kept
Combatting the “undruggable” RAS genes
Patients with pancreatic cancer have an overall poor prognosis: in most patients, the disease has already spread at the time of diagnosis, resulting in limited treatment options. Nearly 90 percent of pancreatic cancers are driven by KRAS mutations, the most common cancer-causing gene mutation across cancer types, which researchers long considered “undruggable.” In 2021, the first KRAS inhibitor was approved to treat non-small cell lung cancer with KRAS G12C mutations, but with longer follow-up, it has become clear that KRAS-mutant cancers can quickly evolve to resist therapies targeted at one specific form of the gene mutation.
“We’ve been excited by the prospect of RAS inhibition for pancreatic cancer, which remains one of the deadliest and most difficult forms of cancer to treat,” said co-corresponding senior author
A new type of RAS inhibitor
In this study, the researchers used RAS(ON) multi-selective inhibitors, the investigational agent daraxonrasib (RMC-6236) and the preclinical tool compound RMC-7977 (both discovered by Revolution Medicines, whose scientists contributed to the study). These inhibitors use a different mechanism of action than most other KRAS inhibitors (including that in the previous study) to target the active or ON-state of multiple forms of RAS mutations.
“The benefit of this ‘multi-selective’ approach is that the inhibitors are designed to inhibit multiple RAS mutations, so if the cancer mutates, and another type of RAS mutation emerges, the treatment may not necessarily stop working,” Vonderheide explained.
The research team found that not only was RAS(ON) multi-selective inhibition effective in preclinical pancreatic cancer models, but it was even more effective when combined with immunotherapy. Using the combination approach, all mouse models had tumor shrinkage and half had a complete response, meaning the tumor was eliminated.
The research team used a Penn-developed immunocompetent model considered the gold standard worldwide for assessing potential therapies for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. This model allows the tumor to spontaneously evolve after implantation, making it possible to discern the drug’s impact on the surrounding tumor microenvironment. The research team found that RAS(ON) multi-selective inhibition reshaped the tumor microenvironment by bringing in more T cells and other immune cells, making the tumor particularly receptive to immunotherapy.
Next steps and clinical trial information
Daraxonrasib (RMC-6236) is already being tested in clinical trials across the United States. A clinical trial testing RAS(ON) inhibitors with other anticancer agents in certain patients with gastrointestinal solid tumors is now open at several sites across the country, including at Penn Medicine.
“We’re hopeful that we’re starting to crack the code on immunotherapy and RAS therapy for pancreatic cancer,” Vonderheide said. “After decades of limited progress, it’s encouraging to see new treatment approaches making their way into the clinic for patients.”
The study was supported by Revolution Medicines, the National Institutes of Health (R01CA252225, R01CA276512, P30DK050306, P30CA016520) the Department of Defense (W81XWH2210730), the Molecular Pathology and Imaging Core, A Love for Life, the Basser Center for BRCA, and the Penn Pancreatic Cancer Research Center.
Information for patients interested in joining a clinical trial:
Editor’s note: Vonderheide is an inventor on patents relating to cancer cellular immunotherapy and KRAS immune epitopes.



































