Phase 1 study of M2698, a p70S6K/AKT dual inhibitor, in patients with advanced cancer

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 14 - Trang 1-10 - 2021
Apostolia-Maria Tsimberidou1, Jamie V. Shaw2, Dejan Juric3, Claire Verschraegen4, Amy M. Weise5, John Sarantopoulos6, Gilberto Lopes7, John Nemunaitis8, Monica Mita9, Haeseong Park10, Barbara Ellers-Lenz11, Hui Tian2, Wenyuan Xiong12, Remigiusz Kaleta2, Razelle Kurzrock13
1Department of Investigational Cancer Therapeutics, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, USA
2EMD Serono Research and Development Institute, Inc., Billerica, USA
3Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, USA
4Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, Columbus, USA
5Karmanos Cancer Institute, Detroit, USA
6Institute for Drug Development, Mays Cancer Center at University of Texas Health San Antonio MD Anderson Cancer Center, San Antonio, USA
7Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, Miami, USA
8Gradalis, Inc., Carrollton, USA
9Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, USA
10Washington University, St. Louis, USA
11Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany
12Merck Institute of Pharmacometrics, Merck Serono SA, Lausanne, Switzerland
13Moores Cancer Center, La Jolla, USA

Tóm tắt

The PI3K/AKT/mTOR (PAM) pathway is a key regulator of tumor therapy resistance. We investigated M2698, an oral p70S6K/AKT dual inhibitor, in patients with advanced cancer who failed standard therapies. M2698 was administered as monotherapy (escalation, 15–380 mg daily; food effect cohort, 240–320 mg daily) and combined with trastuzumab or tamoxifen. Overall, 101 patients were treated (M2698, n = 62; M2698/trastuzumab, n = 13; M2698/tamoxifen, n = 26). Patients were predominantly aged < 65 years, were female, had performance status 1 and were heavily pretreated. There was a dose- and concentration-dependent inhibition of pS6 levels in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and tumor tissue. M2698 was well tolerated; the most common treatment-emergent adverse events were gastrointestinal, abnormal dreams and fatigue (serious, attributed to M2698: monotherapy, 8.1%; M2698/trastuzumab, 7.7%; M2698/tamoxifen, 11.5% of patients). The recommended phase 2 doses of M2698 were 240 mg QD (monotherapy), 160 mg QD (M2698/trastuzumab) and 160 mg QD/240 mg intermittent regimen (M2698/tamoxifen). In the monotherapy cohort, 27.4% of patients had stable disease at 12 weeks; no objective response was noted. The median progression-free survival (PFS) durations in patients with PAM pathway alterations with and without confounding markers (KRAS, EGFR, AKT2) were 1.4 months and 2.8 months, respectively. Two patients with breast cancer (M2698/trastuzumab, n = 1; M2698/tamoxifen, n = 1) had partial response; their PFS durations were 31 months and 2.7 months, respectively. M2698 was well tolerated. Combined with trastuzumab or tamoxifen, M2698 demonstrated antitumor activity in patients with advanced breast cancer resistant to multiple standard therapies, suggesting that it could overcome treatment resistance. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01971515. Registered October 23, 2013.

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