Phase I safety and pharmacokinetic (PK) study of veliparib in combination with whole brain radiation therapy (WBRT) in patients (pts) with brain metastases.

2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 2013-2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Minesh P. Mehta ◽  
Walter J. Curran ◽  
Ding Wang ◽  
Fen Wang ◽  
Lawrence Kleinberg ◽  
...  

2013 Background: Veliparib is an oral PARP-1 and -2 inhibitor that enhances the antitumor activity of DNA damaging agents including radiation therapy in vivo. In pre-clinical models, veliparib crosses the blood-brain barrier. This ongoing phase I dose-escalation study evaluates the safety, PK, and provides preliminary antitumor activity of veliparib in combination with WBRT in pts with brain metastases. Methods: Pts with brain metastases from non-CNS primary solid malignancy, adequate organ function, RPA Class 2, and KPS ≥70 were treated with WBRT (37.5 Gy in 15 fractions or 30 Gy in 10 fractions) QD with veliparib BID with every fraction of WBRT in escalating doses of 10, 20, 30, 50, 100, 150, and 200 mg; the final WBRT fraction was followed by 1 extra day of veliparib. Safety, PK, and tumor response by RECIST were assessed. Results: At the time of reporting 59 pts (M/F, 21/38; median age 57 y) had been treated. Baseline KPS was 70, 80, 90, and 100 in 6.8, 32.2, 40.7, and 20.3% pts, respectively; primary tumor types were breast (n=20), NSCLC (n=20), melanoma (n=9), colorectal (n=2), and others (n=8); 71.2% pts had multiple lesions; and 18.6% had prior brain SRS. Grade 3/4 treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs; ≥5%) were fatigue (6.8%), anemia (5.1%), hyponatraemia (5.1%), and thrombocytopenia (5.1%); other TEAEs (≥20%) were fatigue (57.6%), headache (42.4%), nausea (40.7%), alopecia (28.8%), vomiting (22%), radiation skin reactions (22%), and decreased appetite (22%). PK of veliparib were approximately dose-proportional, with oral clearance of 21.6 ± 14.2 L/h (mean ± SD, n=45), minimal drug accumulation at day 15, and no significant effect of food on bioavailability. Tumor response was evaluable in 48 pts. Best tumor response and median survival were 37.5% and 10 months (m) for NSCLC, and 52.9% and 12.5 m for breast cancer (excluding pts with leptomeningeal disease). Conclusions: Addition of veliparib up to 200 mg BID was well tolerated with concurrent WBRT and dose escalation ongoing. The PK of veliparib was dose proportional with no food effect. Preliminary antitumor activity is encouraging and informative for the design of more definitive trials.

2019 ◽  
Vol 105 (1) ◽  
pp. S10-S11
Author(s):  
E.S. Murphy ◽  
K. Yang ◽  
J.H. Suh ◽  
J.S. Yu ◽  
C. Schilero ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
C. Chung ◽  
C. Menard ◽  
C. Stevens ◽  
N. Laperriere ◽  
B. Millar ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (18_suppl) ◽  
pp. 13026-13026 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. C. Donehower ◽  
A. Jimeno ◽  
J. Li PhD ◽  
K. Galvin ◽  
F. Anthony ◽  
...  

13026 Background: ON-1910.Na is a new chemical entity, novel cell cycle inhibitor which arrests cells in G2/M, affects phosphorylation of several regulatory kinases and lacks cross resistance to other standard chemotherapy agents. This is a first-in-man Phase I dose escalation study to determine the dose limiting toxicities, recommended Phase II dose, and pharmacokinetic (PK) profile, and to document any antitumor activity of ON-01910.Na. Methods: Patients had histologically confirmed solid tumors refractory to standard therapy. ON-1910.Na, formulated as a solution in PEG400, was administered as a 2-hour infusion on days 1, 4, 8, 11, 15, and 18 followed by a 10 day observation period for a total of 28 days per cycle. The initial dose was 80 mg and was escalated using an accelerated titration schedule; one patient was treated per cohort until grade 2 toxicity was documented. A dose confirmation cohort of up to 12 patients will be treated at the maximun tolerated dose (MTD). A comprehensive PK study was performed on days 1 and 15 of the first cycle, plus trough samples were collected. Results: Thirteen patients (7F, 6M; ages 46–73) have received 20 cycles. Dose levels of 80, 160, 320, 480, 800, 1280, 2080, and 3120 mg were evaluated in 8 patients, and a further dose of 4370 mg has been evaluated in 5 patients. Toxicities have been anemia (2 G1, 1 G2), leucopenia (1 G1, 1 G2), hyperglycemia (2 G1), elevated AST/ALT (1 G1, 1 G2), nausea (3 G1), diarrhea (3 G1), skeletal pain (5 G1, 1 G2), abdominal pain (2 G1), tumor pain (1 G2), and fatigue (3 G1, 1 G2), and have clustered at the latter 3 dose levels. PK analysis shows increasing ON-1910.Na exposure with increasing doses. ON-1910.Na has a low clearance (13 L/h), long half-life (20 h), distribution in excess of blood volume (58 L) and PK parameters are similar on days 1 and 15. Approximately 3-fold and 5-fold inter-subject variation in ON-1910.Na clearance was observed on days 1 and 15, respectively. No antitumor activity has been documented by standard criteria. Conclusions: Dose escalation is continuing. [Table: see text]


2011 ◽  
Vol 29 (7_suppl) ◽  
pp. 331-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. F. McDermott ◽  
C. G. Drake ◽  
M. Sznol ◽  
J. A. Sosman ◽  
D. C. Smith ◽  
...  

331 Background: Programmed death-1 (PD-1), a T-cell inhibitory receptor, may suppress antitumor immunity. BMS-936558, a fully human PD-1 blocking antibody, has shown antitumor activity and manageable toxicity after biweekly dosing (Sznol, ASCO 2010, #2506). This report provides an update on safety and antitumor activity with special emphasis on RCC. Methods: An open-label phase I dose escalation study of BMS-936558 was conducted in patients (pts) with treatment refractory metastatic clear-cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC), castrate-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC), melanoma (MEL), non-small cell lung cancer, or colorectal cancer (CRC). Dose escalation continued to 10 mg/kg when an expansion cohort for pts (16) with each tumor type was opened for additional safety and efficacy information. Tumor response (RECIST) was evaluated every 8 weeks. Clinically stable pts with early PD could continue until further PD or clinical deterioration. Results: 126 pts (18 RCC) were treated with 1, 3, or 10 mg/kg. MTD was not reached. Across all doses, the most common AEs (Any/grade 3-4) were fatigue (45.2%/6.3%) and diarrhea (30.2%/0.8%) while the most common drug-related AEs (Any/grade 3-4) were fatigue (20.6%/0.8%), rash (11.9%/0%), pruritus (11.3%/0%), and diarrhea (10.3%/0.8%). There was no apparent relationship between dose and frequency of AEs. One pt died with sepsis while being treated for drug-related grade 4 pneumonitis. The median number of prior treatment regimens in the RCC cohort was 2 (range 1-6). Of the 18 RCC pts, 16 were treated with 10 mg/kg. The median duration of treatment was 7.6+mo. ORR was 5/16 (31.2%) and SD>4mo was 6/16 (37.5%). The median duration of response was 4.0+ mo (3.7-7.4+ mo). Of the 2 RCC pts treated with 1 mg/kg, 1 obtained a CR (12+ mo) and 1 had SD (21+ mo). For evaluable CRPC pts, 1/15 pts (6.7%) obtained a PR (2+ mo) and 3/15 (20%) had SD>4mo. Conclusions: BMS-936558 administered biweekly is tolerable and has encouraging antitumor activity in a previously treated patients with RCC. Data on baseline characteristics, long-term toxicity and response duration will be updated at the meeting. [Table: see text]


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