INTRODUCTION: being the predominant driver in recurrent disease, for which effective and durable treatment options remain limited. AREAS COVERED: This article reviews the mechanistic rationale for combined RAF/MEK and focal adhesion kinase (FAK) inhibition in LGSOC, focusing on avutometinib (a first-in-class RAF/MEK clamp) and defactinib (a selective FAK inhibitor). A structured review of preclinical and clinical evidence was conducted, including key findings from phase I FRAME and phase II RAMP-201 trials. Efficacy outcomes, safety and tolerability profiles, and the current regulatory landscape, including accelerated approval in the United States and ongoing phase III evaluation, are discussed. EXPERT OPINION: -mutant tumors. If confirmed in phase III trials, this combination may establish a molecularly informed disease-specific treatment paradigm with the potential for more durable disease control than existing therapies.
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Vivek Podder
Brian M Slomovitz
Robert L Coleman
Mount Sinai Medical Center
The US Oncology Network
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Podder et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69f594ca71405d493afffb3e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/14737140.2026.2665840
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