iMATRIX-Atezolizumab, a Phase 1/2 Study of the Safety, Pharmacokinetics, and Activity of Atezolizumab in Paediatric/Young Adult Patients with Previously Treated Solid Tumours

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Birgit Geoerger ◽  
C Michel Zwaan ◽  
Lynley V. Marshall ◽  
Jean Michon ◽  
Franck Bourdeaut ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A545-A545
Author(s):  
Ruth Plummer ◽  
Mikael Sodergren ◽  
David Pinato ◽  
Debashis Sarker ◽  
Vikash Reebye ◽  
...  

BackgroundMTL-CEBPA is a novel immunotherapy targeting the myeloid cell lineage which has shown promising clinical activity as monotherapy and combination therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Immunosuppressive myeloid cells are associated with worse outcomes to checkpoint inhibitors. Pre-clinical data have shown that MTL-CEBPA potentiates the oncological effect of PD-1 inhibitors.MethodsThis phase 1A/B, first-in-human, open-label, multicenter study evaluates the safety, tolerability, PK, and efficacy of MTL-CEBPA in combination with a pembrolizumab in adult patients with advanced solid tumours across 3 dose cohorts (70mg/98mg/130mg/m2 MTL-CEBPA once weekly for 3 consecutive weeks with final week break per cycle, with 200mg pembrolizumab every 3 weeks). The primary endpoint is safety and ORR; key secondary endpoints include PK, CR rate & DCR. Key inclusion criteria: Patients with advanced solid tumours who have progressed on standard of care therapy or for whom no standard therapy is available, measurable disease, ECOG PS <2, life expectancy >3 months. A dose exploration will determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) or recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D).Results10 pts (3 men, 7 women; median age 50.5yrs), all with different tumor types (1 each of triple negative breast, methothelioma, squamous thymic, cholangiocarcinoma, eccrine, fibrolamellar hepatocellular, colorectal, pancreatic and 2 platinum resistant high-grade serous ovarian). 4 pts had ≥4 prior lines of treatment. All pts reported treatment-related AEs, 7 pts reported AEs considered related to MTL-CEBPA only and all were grade 1 or 2. The most common was nausea (n=3) followed by anaemia, headache, insomnia, neutropenia, pyrexia, transaminase increase and ventricular extrasystole (all n=1). Five pts reported AEs considered related to pembrolizumab only, 2AEs in 1 pt only were grade 3 (ALT and AST increases) There were no DLTs, SAEs or AEs leading to discontinuation or to death in the study. Tumor response was evaluated in 9 pts. 2 pts had a PR (epithelioid mesothelioma at 2 months with 83% tumour reduction, pt ongoing at 9 months & serous ovarian cancer at 2 months with 69% reduction in tumour, pt progressed at 6 months). Three pts had SD, 4 pts had PD as BOR, and 4 pts are continuing to receive treatment.ConclusionsMTL-CEBPA in combination with pembrolizumab demonstrated manageable toxicity at the dose levels tested and has shown antitumor activity. MTD was not reached and RP2D was determined at 130mg/m2 on day 1, 8 and 15 of a 28 day cycle. Enrolment into the dose expansion is ongoing.Trial RegistrationThis study was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT04105335.Ethics ApprovalThe study was approved by the North East - Newcastle & North Tyneside 2 Research Ethics Committee, approval number 19/NE/0312.


Author(s):  
Barbara Altieri ◽  
Roberta Modica ◽  
Filomena Bottiglieri ◽  
Cicco Federica de ◽  
Antongiulio Faggiano ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. iii329-iii329
Author(s):  
Minako Sugiyama ◽  
Takayuki Hashimoto ◽  
Takashi Mori ◽  
Kazuya Hara ◽  
Yukayo Terashita ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND To reduce treatment-related adverse events in pediatric and young-adult patients with brain tumors, proton beam radiotherapy (PBT) has recently been performed instead of conventional X-ray radiotherapy. However, whether PBT is as effective as X-ray radiotherapy has not been sufficiently investigated, especially in patients receiving whole-ventricular irradiation. METHODS We report a retrospective observation of 15 patients with intracranial germ cell tumors (GCT), who received PBT at our institution from April 2014 to September 2019. We evaluated their clinical course, short-term adverse events, and prognosis. RESULTS/ CONCLUSION Fifteen patients (9 males and 6 females; median age 13 years) who received PBT following induction chemotherapy were analyzed. Nine patients received 23.4–27.0 GyE of whole-ventricular irradiation due to GCT in the pituitary gland, pineal body, or hypothalamic area. Three patients received 23.4 GyE of whole-brain irradiation: one of them had boost irradiation for basal ganglia. Three patients received 30.6 GyE of craniospinal irradiation (CSI). Six of the 15 patients experienced nausea (grade 2, according to the CTCAE version 4.0). Four patients, including two who received CSI, showed myelosuppression: decrease in white blood cell count, lymphocyte cell count, and neutrophil count (grade 3). No other severe short-term adverse events of &gt;grade 2 was observed in any of the patients. At a median follow-up of 21 months (2-62 months) after irradiation. all patients are alive without recurrence. Our results may be encouraging and further investigations with a larger scale is warranted.


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