Literature DB >> 24604265

A phase I study of the human monoclonal anti-NRP1 antibody MNRP1685A in patients with advanced solid tumors.

Colin D Weekes1, Muralidhar Beeram, Anthony W Tolcher, Kyriakos P Papadopoulos, Lia Gore, Priti Hegde, Yan Xin, Ron Yu, L Mason Shih, Hong Xiang, Rainer K Brachmann, Amita Patnaik.   

Abstract

The human monoclonal antibody MNRP1685A targets the VEGF binding domain of neuropilin-1 (NRP1), a multi-domain receptor necessary for neural development and blood vessel maturation. In nonclinical studies, MNRP1685A prevents vascular maturation by keeping blood vessels in an immature, highly VEGF-dependent state. We explored the safety and tolerability of MNRP1685A in patients with advanced solid tumors. Patients were treated with MNRP1685A given intravenously every 3 weeks using a 3 + 3 dose-escalation design with 7 dose-escalation cohorts. Twenty-four of 35 patients (69 %) experienced drug-related adverse events (AEs) of infusion-related reaction on the day of MNRP1685A administration. With premedication including dexamethasone, infusions were well-tolerated with main symptoms of pruritus and rash. Outside the day of infusion, most common (≥ 2 patients) related AEs were fatigue (17 %), pruritus (9 %), myalgia and thrombocytopenia (both 6 %) (all were Grade 1-2). MNRP1685A-related Grade ≥ 3 AEs consisted of one dose-limiting toxicity of Grade 3 upper gastrointestinal bleeding and one related Grade 3 thrombocytopenia, coinciding with unrelated Grade 3 fungemia and duodenal obstruction. MNRP1685A showed nonlinear PK with more-than-dose proportional increases in exposure, consistent with broad target expression. Transient platelet count reductions (≥ 30 % from predose) were observed in 56 % of evaluable patients. Nine patients were on study for ≥ 4 cycles, one colorectal cancer patient for one year. MNRP1685A was generally well-tolerated. The primary MNRP1685A-related AE was infusion-related reaction, which were attenuated by premedication including dexamethasone. Transient platelet count reductions were frequent but did not impact MNRP1685A dosing.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24604265     DOI: 10.1007/s10637-014-0071-z

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


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