Cristiana Sessa 1 , Patricia Lorusso , Anthony Tolcher , Françoise Farace , Nathalie Lassau , Angelo Delmonte , Antonio Braghetti , Rastislav Bahleda , Patrick Cohen , Marie Hospitel , Christine Veyrat-Follet , Jean-Charles Soria . Show Affiliations »
Abstract
PURPOSE: The vascular disrupting agent ombrabulin rapidly reduces tumor blood flow and causes necrosis in vivo. A phase I dose-escalation study was designed to determine the recommended phase II dose (RP2D) of single-agent ombrabulin administered once every three weeks in patients with advanced solid malignancies. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Ombrabulin (30-minute infusion) was escalated from 6 to 60 mg/m2, with RP2D cohort expansion. Safety, tumor response, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamic biomarkers were evaluated. RESULTS: Eleven dose levels were evaluated in 105 patients. Two patients had dose-limiting toxicities in cycle 1 during escalation: grade 3 abdominal pain at 50 mg/m2, grade 3 tumor pain/grade 3 hypertension at 60 mg/m2, and the RP2D was 50 mg/m2 (39 patients). Common toxicities were headache, asthenia, abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhea, transient hypertension, anemia, and lymphopenia. No clinically significant QTc prolongations or left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) decreases occurred. Ombrabulin was rapidly converted to its active metabolite RPR258063 (half-life 17 minutes and 8.7 hours, respectively), both having dose-proportional exposure. Weak inhibition of CYP2C19-mediated metabolism occurred at the clinical doses used and there was no effect on CYP1A2 and CYP3A4. A patient with rectal cancer had a partial response and eight patients had stable disease lasting four months or more. Circulating endothelial cells (CEC), VEGF, and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 levels increased significantly six to 10 hours postinfusion in a subset of patients. CONCLUSIONS: The recommended schedule for single-agent ombrabulin is 50 mg/m2 every 3 weeks. CECs, VEGF, and MMP-9 are potential biomarkers of ombrabulin activity. ©2013 AACR.
PURPOSE: The vascular disrupting agent ombrabulin rapidly reduces tumor blood flow and causes necrosis in vivo. A phase I dose-escalation study was designed to determine the recommended phase II dose (RP2D) of single-agent ombrabulin administered once every three weeks in patients with advanced solid malignancies . EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Ombrabulin (30-minute infusion) was escalated from 6 to 60 mg/m2, with RP2D cohort expansion. Safety, tumor response, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamic biomarkers were evaluated. RESULTS: Eleven dose levels were evaluated in 105 patients . Two patients had dose-limiting toxicities in cycle 1 during escalation: grade 3 abdominal pain at 50 mg/m2, grade 3 tumor pain /grade 3 hypertension at 60 mg/m2, and the RP2D was 50 mg/m2 (39 patients ). Common toxicities were headache , asthenia , abdominal pain , nausea , diarrhea , transient hypertension , anemia , and lymphopenia . No clinically significant QTc prolongations or left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) decreases occurred. Ombrabulin was rapidly converted to its active metabolite RPR258063 (half-life 17 minutes and 8.7 hours, respectively), both having dose-proportional exposure. Weak inhibition of CYP2C19 -mediated metabolism occurred at the clinical doses used and there was no effect on CYP1A2 and CYP3A4 . A patient with rectal cancer had a partial response and eight patients had stable disease lasting four months or more. Circulating endothelial cells (CEC), VEGF , and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 levels increased significantly six to 10 hours postinfusion in a subset of patients . CONCLUSIONS: The recommended schedule for single-agent ombrabulin is 50 mg/m2 every 3 weeks. CECs, VEGF , and MMP-9 are potential biomarkers of ombrabulin activity. ©2013 AACR.
Entities: Chemical
Disease
Gene
Species
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Year: 2013
PMID: 23833302 DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-13-0427
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 1078-0432 Impact factor: 12.531