Literature DB >> 21809026

Phase I and pharmacokinetic study of capecitabine and the oral mTOR inhibitor everolimus in patients with advanced solid malignancies.

Maarten J Deenen1, Heinz-Josef Klümpen, Dick J Richel, Rolf W Sparidans, Mariette J Weterman, Jos H Beijnen, Jan H M Schellens, Johanna W Wilmink.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Everolimus is an oral mTOR-inhibitor. Preclinical data show synergistic effects of mTOR inhibition in combination with 5-fluorouracil-based anticancer therapy. The combination of everolimus with capecitabine seems therefore an attractive new, orally available, treatment regimen. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Safety, preliminary efficacy and pharmacokinetics of everolimus in combination with capecitabine were investigated in patients with advanced solid malignancies. Patients were treated with fixed dose everolimus 10 mg/day continuously, plus capecitabine bid for 14 days in three-weekly cycles. Dose escalation of capecitabine proceeded according to the standard 3 × 3 phase I design in four predefined dose levels (500-1,000 mg/m(2) bid).
RESULTS: In total, 18 patients were enrolled. Median (range) treatment duration with everolimus was 70 days (21-414). Capecitabine 1,000 mg/m(2) bid combined with 10 mg/day everolimus was declared the maximum tolerated dose, at which level one patient developed dose-limiting toxicity (stomatitis grade 3). Drug-related adverse events were mostly grade ≤ 2 and included mainly fatigue (56%), stomatitis (50%), and hand-foot syndrome (33%). Partial response was documented in three patients, and four had stable disease. There was no pharmacokinetic interaction between everolimus and capecitabine.
CONCLUSION: Everolimus 10 mg/day continuously combined with capecitabine 1,000 mg/m(2) bid for 14 days every 3 weeks is a patient-convenient, safe and tolerable oral treatment regimen. This is the first study to demonstrate feasibility of this combination at doses with proven single agent efficacy in a number of tumors. Prolonged clinical benefit was observed in an encouraging 39% of patients with advanced solid malignancies.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21809026      PMCID: PMC3388253          DOI: 10.1007/s10637-011-9723-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Invest New Drugs        ISSN: 0167-6997            Impact factor:   3.850


Introduction

The PI3K/Akt pathway is an important intracellular signalling pathway that is often dysregulated in multiple types of cancers. Signal transduction of activated PI3K/Akt is transmitted through several downstream pathways, including the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) [1, 2]. Everolimus, an oral mTOR inhibitor, has demonstrated antitumor properties including inhibition of cell proliferation, cell survival and angiogenesis in preclinical studies [3-11]. Interestingly, in cancer cell lines synergistic anticancer effects of mTOR inhibition were observed when used in combination with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) [12-15]. Recently, everolimus has been investigated as single agent in phase I–III clinical trials in patients with advanced renal cell carcinoma [16, 17], metastatic pancreatic cancer [18], advanced pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors [19], metastatic breast cancer [20], advanced non-small cell lung cancer [21], and in patients with various advanced solid tumors [22-24]. These trials showed that treatment with everolimus continuously at 10 mg per day was well tolerated and showed biological activity with an acceptable side effect profile, consisting of mainly stomatitis and fatigue. Overall, the preclinical and clinical data suggest that everolimus may be more efficacious when used in combination with other anticancer drugs. Indeed, everolimus has been combined in phase I–II trials with paclitaxel [25, 26], gemcitabine [27], gefitinib [28], bevacizumab [29] and letrozole [30], and several other early clinical trials using combinations of everolimus with cytotoxic agents are currently ongoing. Capecitabine is an oral pre-prodrug of 5-FU. Recently, capecitabine combined with everolimus has been tested in 15 heavily pretreated Korean patients with advanced gastric cancer [31]. The combination of capecitabine plus everolimus seems especially attractive due to its oral availability and easy use in an outpatient setting. This patient-friendly approach, the preclinical synergistic effects of 5-FU-based anticancer therapy and mTOR inhibition, plus the available clinical experience of mTOR inhibitors in patients with cancer served as the rationale to initiate this phase I trial of everolimus in combination with capecitabine. The purpose of this study was to determine the safety, tolerability and the pharmacokinetic interaction of capecitabine and everolimus in patients with advanced solid malignancies.

Materials and methods

Patient population

Eligible patients were aged ≥18 years with histological or cytological confirmed solid malignancies refractory to standard therapies, or for whom no standard treatment existed. Other eligibility criteria included WHO performance status ≤2, estimated life expectancy of ≥3 months, adequate bone marrow (white blood cell count ≥3.0 × 109/L, platelets ≥100 × 109/L) and adequate hepatic and renal function (serum bilirubin ≤1.5 × upper limit of normal (ULN), ALAT/ASAT ≤2.5 × ULN or in case of liver metastases ≤5 × ULN and serum creatinine ≤150 μmol/L). Patients were ineligible if they were known with alcoholism, drug addiction and/or psychotic disorders that were not suitable for adequate follow-up. Women who were pregnant or lactating, or able to conceive but unwilling to practice effective anticonception were also excluded. All patients gave written informed consent. The study was approved by the Medical Ethics Committee of the participating institutions and was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and Good Clinical Practice guidelines.

Study design and treatment

This was a phase I, open-label, multi-center, dose escalation study to assess the safety, dose-limiting toxicity (DLT), maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) and the pharmacokinetic interaction of the combination of everolimus and capecitabine. The study was conducted at the Amsterdam Medical Center and the Netherlands Cancer Institute (the Netherlands). Everolimus was administered continuously twice daily (bid) at a fixed total oral dose of 10 mg (5 mg bid). The first 7 days of treatment patients were treated with single agent everolimus to reach steady state concentrations. Treatment with capecitabine started on day 8 and was given twice daily for 14 days every 3 weeks. Capecitabine was dose-escalated according to four predefined dose levels: 500, 650, 800 and 1,000 mg/m2 capecitabine bid. At least three patients per dose level were recruited and expanded to six if one of three patients experienced DLT. Dose escalation to the next dose level was permitted if no DLT occurred in any of three or in ≤1 of six patients. In case of DLT in one or more out of three, or in two or more out of six patients, that dose level was declared intolerable and no further dose escalation occurred. The immediately preceding dose level was declared the MTD. No intra-patient dose escalations were allowed. DLT was defined as any of the following events related to study treatment and occurring during the first treatment cycle: neutropenia CTC grade 4 lasting more than 5 days, CTC grade ≥4 platelets or grade 3 platelets with bleeding, vomiting CTC grade ≥2 or any other toxicity CTC grade ≥3 (excluding alopecia), despite best supportive care. Toxicity was graded using the National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 3.0 and was assessed every treatment cycle. In case of measurable disease, tumor measurements were performed at baseline and every three cycles and were evaluated in accordance with the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST 1.0) [32].

Pharmacokinetic analysis

To determine the pharmacokinetic interaction between everolimus and capecitabine plus metabolites, patients received (only for pharmacokinetic purposes) one single morning administration of capecitabine 7 days prior to start of treatment (day −7), at the dose level that the patient would receive at start of treatment. Plasma samples for capecitabine were obtained on day −7 (without everolimus) and on day 8 (with everolimus at steady state), both at predose and at 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 6 and 8 h after capecitabine intake. Vice versa, blood samples for everolimus were drawn on day 7 (without capecitabine) and on day 8 (with capecitabine), both at predose and at 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9 and 12 h after administration of everolimus. In addition, trough concentrations (immediately before the morning dose) of everolimus were determined on days 1, 4, 7, 8, 15, 22 and 29 to assess the formation and continuation of steady state blood concentrations. Everolimus was determined in whole blood by high-performance liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS) after protein precipitation with acetonitrile using the deuterated stable isotope everolimus-d4 as internal standard. Capecitabine and the metabolites 5′-deoxy-5- fluorocytidine (5′-dFCR), 5′-deoxy-5- fluorouridine (5′-dFUR), 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and 5-fluorodihydrouracil (FUH2) were determined in plasma by a validated HPLC-MS/MS method as described previously [33]. The pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated using PK Solutions 2.0 (Summit Research Services, Montrose, CO 81401; www.summitpk.com) and included the area under the concentration-time curve (AUC), maximum concentration (Cmax), time to Cmax (tmax), and in addition for everolimus trough concentrations at steady state (C0ss).

Statistical analysis

Descriptive statistics were used for evaluation of the safety, efficacy and pharmacokinetic parameters using SPSS statistics version 17.0.

Results

In total, 18 patients with advanced solid tumors were enrolled between February 2008 and June 2010. Patient characteristics are listed in Table 1. All patients received at least one course of treatment and were evaluable for toxicity assessments (Table 2). Overall, a total of 114 treatment cycles were given, with a median (range) of 3 (1–19) cycles per patient. Median (range) treatment duration with everolimus was 70 (21–414) days (Table 2). Four patients temporarily interrupted treatment with everolimus: in three cases due to adverse events and in one due to fever. Following treatment interruption, two patients received a 50% dose reduction of everolimus and the others continued treatment at full dose everolimus. Dose reductions for capecitabine were applied in nine patients, mostly due to adverse events.
Table 1

Patient characteristics

Characteristic N %
No. of patients18
Gender
 Male1478
 Female422
Race
 White patients18100
Median age, years61
 Range21–71
Median body surface area, m2 1.9
 Range1.6–2.2
WHO performance status
 0739
 11056
 216
Primary tumor
 Pancreas739
 Major duodenal papilla211
 Esophagus211
 Gallbladder211
 Brain16
 Osteosarcoma16
 Hepatocellular carcinoma16
 Unknown211
Prior anticancer therapy
 Surgery1056
 Radiotherapy422
 Chemotherapy1056
Prior chemotherapy regimens, n
 1528
 2422
 316
Table 2

Treatment administration of the combination of everolimus and capecitabine by dose level

Dose level 1Dose level 2Dose level 3Dose level 4All
Daily dose of everolimus10 mg10 mg10 mg10 mg10 mg
Dose of capecitabine500 mg/m2 bid650 mg/m2 bid800 mg/m2 bid1,000 mg/m2 bid500–1,000 mg/m2 bid
Evaluable patients (N)453618
No. of treatment cycles,
 Median2.59233
 Range1–151–152–33–191–19
No. of treatment days with everolimus,
 Mean ± SD108 ± 126192 ± 14150 ± 20168 ± 153141 ± 131
 Median61202507870
 Range21–29029–32930–7065–41421–414
DLTNoneNoneNone1 patient1 patient

bid twice daily; DLT dose-limiting toxicity; SD standard deviation

Patient characteristics Treatment administration of the combination of everolimus and capecitabine by dose level bid twice daily; DLT dose-limiting toxicity; SD standard deviation

MTD and DLT

No DLT was observed up to 800 mg/m2 of capecitabine bid, and none of the first three patients treated at the 1,000 mg/m2 level developed DLT. Since capecitabine 1,000 mg/m2 bid was the highest predefined dose level and no DLT had occurred thus far, it was decided to include an additional three patients to ensure the tolerability of this level. In one of these additional patients, a man with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma, severe angioneurotic edema occurred 10 days after start of treatment with everolimus (i.e. 3 days after start of capecitabine), which could however be excluded as being drug-related. Nonetheless, treatment with both capecitabine and everolimus was discontinued. Edema quickly resolved, and after 5 days of treatment interruption, treatment was resumed and the first cycle completed with a 50% and 33% reduced dose of everolimus and capecitabine, respectively. Subsequently, the patient developed mucositis grade 3 and thrombocytopenia grade 2 for which start of the second cycle with capecitabine had to be delayed by more than 4 weeks. This toxicity was considered intolerable and dose-limiting. Since none of the other five patients treated at the 1,000 mg/m2 level developed DLT, everolimus 5 mg bid continuously combined with capecitabine 1,000 mg/m2 bid for 14 days every 3 weeks was declared the MTD.

Safety

Table 3 lists the treatment-related CTC grade 1–2 and grade 3–4 adverse events per dose level. The most frequently reported clinical toxicities of any grade included fatigue (56%), stomatitis (50%), hand-foot syndrome (33%) and nausea (22%). Other clinical toxicities included diarrhea and mucositis (both 17%), and anorexia, taste loss, constipation, skin rash and neuropathy (all 11%). Clinical toxicities were never severe (≤ grade 2), with the exception of fatigue in three patients, hand-foot syndrome in two, and nausea in one. The six patients that developed hand-foot syndrome were on average treated with 12.2 ± 5.6 cycles, while the average onset of hand-foot syndrome was after 4.6 ± 2.3 cycles of treatment. With 20–25% dose reductions of capecitabine, five patients were able to continue treatment safely, and one patient went off study due to disease progression.
Table 3

Possibly, probably or definitively treatment related grade 1–2 and grade 3–4 adverse events reported in 2a or more patients

Dose levelDose level 1Dose level 2Dose level 3Dose level 4Total, n (%)
No. of patients N = 4 N = 5 N = 3 N = 6 N = 18 (100)
CTC gradeGrade 1–2Grade 3–4Grade 1–2Grade 3–4Grade 1–2Grade 3–4Grade 1–2Grade 3–4Grade 1–2Grade 3–4
Non-hematological
Fatigue1211147 (39)3 (17)
Stomatitis12159 (50)
Hand-foot syndrome3124 (22)2 (11)
Nausea2113 (17)1 (6)
Diarrhea1113 (17)
Mucositis1112 (11)1 (6)
Anorexia112 (11)
Taste loss22 (11)
Neuropathy22 (11)
Constipation22 (11)
Skin rash112 (11)
Hematology
Hemoglobin353415 (83)
Platelets212239 (50)1 (6)
Leukocytes12227 (39)
Clinical chemistry
GGT1241218 (44)3 (17)
ASAT232310 (56)
ALAT24117 (39)1 (6)
Hypertriglyceridemia1311217 (39)2 (11)
AP21135 (28)2 (11)
Hypokalemia2215 (28)
Hyponatremia21115 (28)
Hypercholesteremia1214 (22)
Hyperkalemia213 (17)
Bilirubin121 (6)2 (11)
Hypercalcemiaa 11 (6)

Numbers represent number of patients

aGrade 4 hypercalcemia occurred in one patient and was therefore included in the table

Possibly, probably or definitively treatment related grade 1–2 and grade 3–4 adverse events reported in 2a or more patients Numbers represent number of patients aGrade 4 hypercalcemia occurred in one patient and was therefore included in the table Decreased hemoglobin was the most frequently reported drug-related hematological adverse event (83%), followed by a decrease in platelets (56%) and leukocytes (39%). Except for one patient in dose level 1 with grade 3 thrombocytopenia, hematological toxicity remained always ≤grade 2. Elevation of gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) of any grade was the most frequently reported biochemical toxicity (61%), but appeared almost never clinically relevant (grade ≤ 2). Only two patients presented with GGT grade 3, and one patient with GGT grade 4, though her GGT-level was already grade 3 at baseline. Elevated levels of ASAT (56%), ALAT (44%) and alkaline phosphatase (39%) were mostly of grade ≤2, except for one patient in whom ALAT grade 3 occurred, and in two patients alkaline phosphatase grade 3. Hypertriglyceridemia and hypercholesteremia occurred in 50% and 22% of the patients, respectively. Hypercalcemia was the second grade 4 toxicity that occurred in this study, which developed after the 3rd cycle of treatment in a patient treated in dose level 4. Due to clinical progression, the patient went off study and was given pamidronate, however a possible relationship with study medication could not be excluded.

Pharmacokinetics of everolimus and capecitabine

Blood samples for pharmacokinetic analyses of everolimus and capecitabine plus metabolites were obtained from 17 to 14 patients, respectively. Pharmacokinetic parameters are provided in Table 4. Everolimus showed a rapid absorption with a median (range) time to reach maximum blood concentrations of 1 (0.5–4) hour. Steady state for everolimus was achieved by day 4 of treatment (Fig. 1a). Steady state was stable and remained steady at least up to day 29 (the last analyzed trough sample in this study) with an average (±SD) concentration of C0ss = 18 (±8.5) ng/mL. This demonstrates that no induction or inhibition of metabolism of everolimus occurred. The mean half-life for everolimus was t1/2 = 15 (±8.2) hours. Furthermore, there was a linear relationship between the AUC of everolimus within a 12 h dosing interval (AUC0–12) and the C0ss concentration (r2 = 0.67). No effect was observed of capecitabine on the pharmacokinetics of everolimus (Figs. 1b and 2a). The AUC0–12 of everolimus at steady state alone and with capecitabine was 302 ± 97 h*ng/mL and 290 ± 114 h*ng/mL, respectively. The inter-patient variability of the exposure to everolimus expressed as the coefficient of variation (%CV) was 36%.
Table 4

Pharmacokinetic parameters of everolimus, capecitabine and capecitabine metabolites

Drug interactionPatients with values (N)Tmax (hr)Cmax (ng/mL)AUC (hr*ng/mL)
Everolimus without capecitabine151.0 (0.5–4.0)50 ± 23302 ± 97
Everolimus with capecitabine171.0 (0.5–4.0)52 ± 21290 ± 114
Capecitabine without everolimus120.5 (0.5–2.0)5627 ± 58155104 ± 3479
Capecitabine with everolimus111.0 (0.5–2.0)3864 ± 32474575 ± 2285
5′-dFCR without everolimus141.0 (0.5–2.0)6972 ± 306911994 ± 5150
5′-dFCR with everolimus131.5 (0.5–4.0)6019 ± 234311513 ± 3458
5′-dFUR without everolimus141.0 (0.5–2.0)6739 ± 34389773 ± 3113
5′-dFUR with everolimus131.5 (0.5–4.0)5357 ± 30489209 ± 3070
5-FU without everolimus70.5 (0.5–4.0)203 ± 230268 ± 219
5-FU with everolimus61.0 (0.5–4.0)157 ± 120264 ± 170
FUH2 without everolimus112.0 (1.0–4.0)817 ± 3012275 ± 730
FUH2 with everolimus102.0 (1.0–4.0)782 ± 4822805 ± 1976

tmax values are median (range), the other parameters are mean ± standard deviations

Cmax maximum concentration; Tmax time to Cmax; AUC Area under the concentration-time curve; hr hour; ng/mL nanogram per millilitre; 5′-dFCR 5′-deoxy-5-fluorocytidine; 5′-dFUR 5′-deoxy-5-fluorouridine; 5-FU 5-fluorouracil; FUH2 5-fluorodihydrouracil

Fig. 1

a Mean (standard deviation) Ctrough (C0ss) concentrations of everolimus in whole blood assessed at days 1, 4, 7, 8, 15, 22 and 29 from start of treatment at a dose 5 mg twice daily, b mean (standard deviation) concentrations of everolimus in whole blood during a 12 h interval at a dose of 5 mg bid at steady state alone (circles, solid line) and with (triangles, dotted line) capecitabine, and c scatter plot of the administered dose of capecitabine versus the observed area under the plasma-concentration time curve (AUC) of capecitabine and dFCR. (Not shown for other capecitabine metabolites for the sake of clarity)

Fig. 2

Individual patient area under the concentration-time curve (AUC) of a everolimus in whole blood without and with capecitabine, b capecitabine in plasma without and with everolimus, c dFCR in plasma without and with everolimus, d dFUR in plasma without and with everolimus, e 5-FU in plasma without and with everolimus and f FUH2 in plasma without and with everolimus

Pharmacokinetic parameters of everolimus, capecitabine and capecitabine metabolites tmax values are median (range), the other parameters are mean ± standard deviations Cmax maximum concentration; Tmax time to Cmax; AUC Area under the concentration-time curve; hr hour; ng/mL nanogram per millilitre; 5′-dFCR 5′-deoxy-5-fluorocytidine; 5′-dFUR 5′-deoxy-5-fluorouridine; 5-FU 5-fluorouracil; FUH2 5-fluorodihydrouracil a Mean (standard deviation) Ctrough (C0ss) concentrations of everolimus in whole blood assessed at days 1, 4, 7, 8, 15, 22 and 29 from start of treatment at a dose 5 mg twice daily, b mean (standard deviation) concentrations of everolimus in whole blood during a 12 h interval at a dose of 5 mg bid at steady state alone (circles, solid line) and with (triangles, dotted line) capecitabine, and c scatter plot of the administered dose of capecitabine versus the observed area under the plasma-concentration time curve (AUC) of capecitabine and dFCR. (Not shown for other capecitabine metabolites for the sake of clarity) Individual patient area under the concentration-time curve (AUC) of a everolimus in whole blood without and with capecitabine, b capecitabine in plasma without and with everolimus, c dFCR in plasma without and with everolimus, d dFUR in plasma without and with everolimus, e 5-FU in plasma without and with everolimus and f FUH2 in plasma without and with everolimus Capecitabine was rapidly absorbed and the median time to reach Cmax was 1 (0.5–2) hour. Plasma concentrations for capecitabine metabolites peaked within 1–2 h after absorption. Since the dose of capecitabine very poorly correlated with the AUCs of capecitabine and its main metabolites 5′-dFCR, 5′-dFUR, 5-FU and FUH2 (r2 = 0.064, 0.063, 0.063, 0.13 and 0.14, respectively), the pharmacokinetic parameters were not dose-corrected (Fig. 1c). Everolimus did not interact with the pharmacokinetics of capecitabine. The AUC of capecitabine alone and with everolimus was 5.1 ± 3.5 h*mg/L and 4.6 ± 2.3 h*mg/L, respectively. Furthermore, Cmax and tmax of capecitabine did not differ between capecitabine alone or with everolimus. Likewise, no differences in the AUC, Cmax and tmax for capecitabine metabolites were observed with concomitantly everolimus (Table 4 and Fig. 2b–f). The inter-patient variabilities in the AUC for capecitabine, 5′-dFCR, 5′-dFUR, 5-FU and FUH2 were %CV = 60%, 37%, 32%, 71% and 57%, respectively.

Efficacy

Overall, 14 patients were evaluable for response by RECIST 1.0: three patients had a confirmed partial response, four had stable disease and seven had progression of disease. Four patients could not be evaluated for response, but had clinical progression of disease, and therefore withdrew early.

Discussion

This study explored the safety, pharmacokinetics and preliminary efficacy of the combination of capecitabine with the oral mTOR inhibitor everolimus in patients with advanced solid malignancies. Treatment with everolimus combined with capecitabine was generally well tolerated and showed an acceptable toxicity profile. In total, one DLT (mucositis grade 3) was observed, which occurred in one out of six patients treated at the highest dose level. In this study, we did not reach the maximum of two or more DLTs out of six treated patients in any dose level. The study protocol was not amended though with an additional higher dose level, given the fact that dose reductions of capecitabine were indicated in 50% of all patients during treatment. This was mostly due to hand-foot syndrome, for which the dose of capecitabine was reduced by 25% after on average 6 cycles of treatment. Therefore, our recommendation for further phase II trials with this combination is everolimus 10 mg daily continuously combined with 1,000 mg/m2 capecitabine twice daily for 14 days in 3-weekly cycles. The most commonly reported treatment-related clinical side effects were fatigue, stomatitis and hand-foot syndrome. Hand-foot syndrome can be attributed to capecitabine, since this has not been observed before in single agent everolimus trials. This well-known side effect of capecitabine resulted in only modest dose reductions of capecitabine in our patients. Although stomatitis is a common adverse event of both capecitabine and everolimus as single agent as well, this overlapping toxicity always remained mild to moderate in severity in this study and was not dose-limiting. Moreover, the frequency of stomatitis in this study was similar compared to studies with single agent everolimus, which suggests that there is no, or only a marginal additive toxic effect of capecitabine. The frequency of fatigue was similar to that of single agent studies with everolimus as well [21-24]. Other adverse events included, diarrhea, anorexia, taste loss, neuropathy and skin rash, but remained non-severe. While in this study the oral treatment regimen of everolimus combined with capecitabine appeared safe and feasible, it is of note that a previous phase I study in which the intravenous mTOR inhibitor temsirolimus was combined with infusional 5-FU and leucovorin, stomatitis/mucositis occurred at all dose-levels and was dose-limiting. Moreover, this combination also resulted in treatment-related fatal bowel perforation in two patients [34]. Similarly, another phase I study reported that everolimus 20 mg per week combined with the antimetabolite gemcitabine 600 mg/m2 on days 1, 8 and 15 in 4-weekly cycles was not tolerated due to severe myelosuppression [27]. However, no such unexplained severe toxicities were observed in our study, which has important implications for further studies. Similarly to what we report in this trial, both previous studies did not show a pharmacokinetic interaction between the mTOR inhibitor and the antimetabolite. This suggests that drug interactions at a pharmacodynamic level, or schedule differences might explain the observed variations in severity of overlapping toxicities when different mTOR inhibitors and cytotoxic antimetabolites are combined. Lim et al. recently published their trial of everolimus combined with capecitabine in Korean patients with advanced gastric cancer [31]. In contrast to their findings of a rather low maximum-tolerated dose (capecitabine 650 mg/m2), our study is the first to demonstrate the feasibility of this combination at doses with proven single agent efficacy in a number of tumors. This surprisingly large difference (650 mg/m2 versus 1,000 mg/m2 capecitabine bid) between the studies might possibly be caused by the gastrectomy in more than half of the patients in the Korean trial already had undergone. It is known that gastrectomy results in a higher systemic exposure and higher Cmax to capecitabine, possibly affecting tolerability [35]. The pharmacokinetic profile of everolimus assessed in this study showed a comparable absorption, systemic exposure, and trough concentration as in other white and Japanese patient cohorts treated with 10 mg everolimus per day [22, 23, 25]. The absorption was relatively fast with a median time to Cmax of 1 h, and steady state was reached within 4 days of treatment. Likewise, capecitabine was rapidly absorbed, and the AUC, Cmax and time to Cmax were in line with previously reported data [36]. Since this was a phase I study, efficacy was not a primary endpoint; nonetheless, 14 patients were evaluable for response. In seven patients a clinical response, including prolonged disease stabilization was achieved. The three patients with a partial response (two patients with pancreatic cancer) and half of patients with stable disease had not received any prior chemotherapy at study entry. But because of the minimal survival advantage of gemcitabine in pancreatic cancer, first line treatment with experimental anticancer therapy is considered a reasonable alternative in this group of patients. Obviously, the relative contribution of everolimus to this clinical benefit in these patients is difficult to determine. However, previous studies with single agent everolimus rarely showed better responses than prolonged disease stabilization. In conclusion, we showed that everolimus twice daily in a total dose of 10 mg/day (5 mg bid) continuously combined with capecitabine 1,000 mg/m2 for 14 days every 3 weeks is a safe and tolerable oral treatment regimen, and achieved prolonged clinical benefit in a significant number of patients. Toxicities were generally mild to moderate severe and were well manageable. No unexplained severe toxicities were reported, and no pharmacokinetic interaction between everolimus and capecitabine was observed. Therefore, the results obtained in this study provided for us a solid basis for our ongoing phase II trial of everolimus and capecitabine in pancreatic cancer patients (Trial identifier NTC01079702. Moreover, the interesting balance between efficacy and burden on the patient of this treatment combination is attractive to investigate in other tumor types as well.
  32 in total

1.  The mTOR inhibitor RAD001 sensitizes tumor cells to DNA-damaged induced apoptosis through inhibition of p21 translation.

Authors:  Iwan Beuvink; Anne Boulay; Stefano Fumagalli; Frederic Zilbermann; Stephan Ruetz; Terence O'Reilly; Francois Natt; Jonathan Hall; Heidi A Lane; George Thomas
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2005-03-25       Impact factor: 41.582

2.  Dual inhibition of mTOR and estrogen receptor signaling in vitro induces cell death in models of breast cancer.

Authors:  Anne Boulay; Joelle Rudloff; Jingjing Ye; Sabine Zumstein-Mecker; Terence O'Reilly; Dean B Evans; Shiuan Chen; Heidi A Lane
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2005-07-15       Impact factor: 12.531

3.  Antitumor efficacy of intermittent treatment schedules with the rapamycin derivative RAD001 correlates with prolonged inactivation of ribosomal protein S6 kinase 1 in peripheral blood mononuclear cells.

Authors:  Anne Boulay; Sabine Zumstein-Mecker; Christine Stephan; Iwan Beuvink; Frederic Zilbermann; Roland Haller; Sonja Tobler; Christoph Heusser; Terence O'Reilly; Barbara Stolz; Andreas Marti; George Thomas; Heidi A Lane
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2004-01-01       Impact factor: 12.701

4.  Phase I pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic study of the oral mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor everolimus in patients with advanced solid tumors.

Authors:  Anne O'Donnell; Sandrine Faivre; Howard A Burris; Daniel Rea; Vassiliki Papadimitrakopoulou; Nicholas Shand; Heidi A Lane; Katharine Hazell; Ulrike Zoellner; John M Kovarik; Cathryn Brock; Suzanne Jones; Eric Raymond; Ian Judson
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2008-03-10       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  Randomized phase II study comparing two schedules of everolimus in patients with recurrent/metastatic breast cancer: NCIC Clinical Trials Group IND.163.

Authors:  Susan L Ellard; Mark Clemons; Karen A Gelmon; Brian Norris; Hagen Kennecke; Stephen Chia; Kathleen Pritchard; Andrea Eisen; Ted Vandenberg; Marianne Taylor; Eric Sauerbrei; Moshe Mishaeli; David Huntsman; Wendy Walsh; Martin Olivo; Lynn McIntosh; Lesley Seymour
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2009-08-17       Impact factor: 44.544

6.  mTOR inhibition reverses Akt-dependent prostate intraepithelial neoplasia through regulation of apoptotic and HIF-1-dependent pathways.

Authors:  Pradip K Majumder; Phillip G Febbo; Rachel Bikoff; Raanan Berger; Qi Xue; Louis M McMahon; Judith Manola; James Brugarolas; Timothy J McDonnell; Todd R Golub; Massimo Loda; Heidi A Lane; William R Sellers
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2004-05-23       Impact factor: 53.440

7.  Efficacy of everolimus (RAD001) in patients with advanced NSCLC previously treated with chemotherapy alone or with chemotherapy and EGFR inhibitors.

Authors:  J-C Soria; F A Shepherd; J-Y Douillard; J Wolf; G Giaccone; L Crino; F Cappuzzo; S Sharma; S H Gross; S Dimitrijevic; L Di Scala; H Gardner; L Nogova; V Papadimitrakopoulou
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2009-06-23       Impact factor: 32.976

8.  A role of the kinase mTOR in cellular transformation induced by the oncoproteins P3k and Akt.

Authors:  M Aoki; E Blazek; P K Vogt
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2001-01-02       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Safety and pharmacokinetics of paclitaxel and the oral mTOR inhibitor everolimus in advanced solid tumours.

Authors:  M Campone; V Levy; E Bourbouloux; D Berton Rigaud; D Bootle; C Dutreix; U Zoellner; N Shand; F Calvo; E Raymond
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2009-01-06       Impact factor: 7.640

10.  Phase I clinical and pharmacokinetic study of RAD001 (everolimus) administered daily to Japanese patients with advanced solid tumors.

Authors:  Isamu Okamoto; Toshihiko Doi; Atsushi Ohtsu; Masaki Miyazaki; Asuka Tsuya; Katsutoshi Kurei; Ken Kobayashi; Kazuhiko Nakagawa
Journal:  Jpn J Clin Oncol       Date:  2009-09-25       Impact factor: 3.019

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  12 in total

1.  Phase II trial of capecitabine and everolimus (RAD001) combination in refractory gastric cancer patients.

Authors:  Su Jin Lee; Jongtae Lee; Jeeyun Lee; Se Hoon Park; Joon Oh Park; Young Suk Park; Ho Yeong Lim; Kyoung-Mee Kim; In-Gu Do; Sin-Ho Jung; Dong-Seok Yim; Won Ki Kang
Journal:  Invest New Drugs       Date:  2013-09-07       Impact factor: 3.850

Review 2.  Current clinical regulation of PI3K/PTEN/Akt/mTOR signalling in treatment of human cancer.

Authors:  Hui Jun Lim; Philip Crowe; Jia-Lin Yang
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-08-22       Impact factor: 4.553

Review 3.  EGFR-TKI resistance in NSCLC patients: mechanisms and strategies.

Authors:  Yuxin Lin; Xian Wang; Hongchuan Jin
Journal:  Am J Cancer Res       Date:  2014-09-06       Impact factor: 6.166

Review 4.  Targeting Notch signalling pathway of cancer stem cells.

Authors:  Vandana Venkatesh; Raghu Nataraj; Gopenath S Thangaraj; Murugesan Karthikeyan; Ashok Gnanasekaran; Shanmukhappa B Kaginelli; Gobianand Kuppanna; Chandrashekrappa Gowdru Kallappa; Kanthesh M Basalingappa
Journal:  Stem Cell Investig       Date:  2018-03-12

5.  A Phase I Trial of the PI3K Inhibitor Buparlisib Combined With Capecitabine in Patients With Metastatic Breast Cancer.

Authors:  Autumn J McRee; Paul K Marcom; Dominic T Moore; William C Zamboni; Zachary A Kornblum; Zhiyuan Hu; Rachel Phipps; Carey K Anders; Katherine Reeder-Hayes; Lisa A Carey; Karen E Weck; Charles M Perou; E Claire Dees
Journal:  Clin Breast Cancer       Date:  2017-10-28       Impact factor: 3.225

6.  A phase I/II, non-randomized, feasibility/safety and efficacy study of the combination of everolimus, cetuximab and capecitabine in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  Sil Kordes; Dick J Richel; Heinz-Josef Klümpen; Mariëtte J Weterman; Arnoldus J W M Stevens; Johanna W Wilmink
Journal:  Invest New Drugs       Date:  2012-02-25       Impact factor: 3.850

7.  Phase II study of capecitabine and the oral mTOR inhibitor everolimus in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  S Kordes; H J Klümpen; M J Weterman; J H M Schellens; D J Richel; J W Wilmink
Journal:  Cancer Chemother Pharmacol       Date:  2015-03-31       Impact factor: 3.333

Review 8.  The mTOR pathway in obesity driven gastrointestinal cancers: Potential targets and clinical trials.

Authors:  Cian O Malley; Graham P Pidgeon
Journal:  BBA Clin       Date:  2015-11-12

9.  Phase Ib/II single-arm trial evaluating the combination of everolimus, lapatinib and capecitabine for the treatment of HER2-positive breast cancer with brain metastases (TRIO-US B-09).

Authors:  Sara Hurvitz; Rashi Singh; Brad Adams; Julie A Taguchi; David Chan; Robert A Dichmann; Aurelio Castrellon; Eddie Hu; Jonathan Berkowitz; Aruna Mani; Brian DiCarlo; Rena Callahan; Ira Smalberg; Xiaoyan Wang; Ivana Meglar; Diego Martinez; Evthokia Hobbs; Dennis J Slamon
Journal:  Ther Adv Med Oncol       Date:  2018-11-09       Impact factor: 8.168

10.  Advances in personalized targeted treatment of metastatic melanoma and non-invasive tumor monitoring.

Authors:  Dragana Klinac; Elin S Gray; Michael Millward; Mel Ziman
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2013-03-19       Impact factor: 6.244

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