From ‘Undruggable’ to Breakthrough: Pan-RAS Inhibitors Transform GI Oncology Practice

Pan-RAS inhibitors like RMC-6236 are showing unprecedented 30% response rates in previously treated pancreatic cancer, potentially ending the decades-long frustration of targeting “undruggable” KRAS mutations. Meanwhile, durvalumab plus FLOT (D-FLOT) and zolbetuximab are reshaping treatment paradigms in gastroesophageal cancers with improved survival outcomes.

Expert Commentary Scope & Focus

  • Speaker: James M. Cleary, MD, PhD, Associate Professor at Harvard Medical School, GI Oncologist
  • Focus Areas: Pancreatic cancer and gastroesophageal cancer treatment advances
  • Perspective: Clinical practice implications of recent therapeutic breakthroughs
  • Context: September 2025 update on paradigm-shifting developments

Key Clinical Developments

Pan-RAS Inhibitors in Pancreatic Cancer

  • RMC-6236 (Revolution Medicine) showing 30% response rate in previously treated pancreatic cancer
  • Progression-free survival over 7 months in early-phase trials
  • RASolute 302 phase 3 trial comparing RMC-6236 vs standard chemotherapy in second-line setting
  • Addresses 90-95% of pancreatic cancers with KRAS mutations
  • Manageable toxicity profile with rash as primary side effect

Gastroesophageal Cancer Advances

  • MATTERHORN trial: D-FLOT showed improved recurrence-free survival (HR 0.7) vs FLOT alone
  • ESOPAC trial: Perioperative FLOT superior to neoadjuvant chemoradiation
  • Zolbetuximab FDA-approved October 2024 for CLDN18.2-positive gastroesophageal cancer

Practice Implications

  • Pan-RAS inhibitors expected to be “paradigm shifting” across colorectal, pancreatic, and biliary tract cancers
  • D-FLOT anticipated to become new standard of care pending FDA approval
  • Zolbetuximab provides first-line option for PD-L1 negative, CLDN18.2-positive patients
  • On-target nausea with zolbetuximab requires enhanced supportive care management

Development Pipeline & Future Outlook

  • KRAS G12D inhibitors in development alongside pan-RAS agents
  • Multiple GI malignancies positioned to benefit from RAS targeting
  • Transition from “undruggable” to actionable targets representing major therapeutic advance
  • Continued expansion of targeted options in historically chemotherapy-dependent cancers

Source: https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/treatment-updates-pancreatic-gastrointestinal-cancer-2025a1000m99

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