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Evolution of a Green and Sustainable Manufacturing Process for Belzutifan: Part 1Process History and Development Strategy

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posted on 2024-02-05, 17:37 authored by Daniel A. DiRocco, Yong-Li Zhong, Diane N. Le, Scott D. McCann, J. Caleb Hethcox, Jungchul Kim, Joshua N. Kolev, Birgit Kosjek, Stephen M. Dalby, Jonathan P. McMullen, Rekha Gangam, William J. Morris
An improved synthesis has been developed for belzutifan, a novel HIF-2α inhibitor for the treatment of Von Hippel–Lindau (VHL) disease-associated renal cell carcinoma (RCC). The efficiency of previous supply and commercial routes was encumbered by a lengthy 5-step sequence, needed to install a chiral benzylic alcohol by traditional methods. Identification and directed evolution of FoPip4H, an iron/α-ketoglutarate dependent hydroxylase, enabled a direct enantioselective C–H hydroxylation of a simple indanone starting material. While this enabling transformation set the stage for a greatly improved synthesis, several other key innovations were made including the development of a base-metal-catalyzed sulfonylation, a KRED-catalyzed dynamic kinetic resolution, and a facile SNAr reaction in water. Together, these improvements resulted in a significantly shorter synthesis (9 steps) versus the supply route (16 steps) and a 75% reduction in process mass intensity (PMI), while also removing the reliance on third-row transition metals and toxic solvents.

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