Amita Patnaik 1 , Glen J Weiss 2 , John E Leonard 3 , Drew Warren Rasco 1 , Jasgit C Sachdev 4 , Terrence L Fisher 5 , Laurie A Winter 5 , Christine Reilly 5 , Robert B Parker 5 , Danielle Mutz 1 , Lisa Blaydorn 2 , Anthony W Tolcher 1 , Maurice Zauderer 5 , Ramesh K Ramanathan 4 . Show Affiliations »
Abstract
PURPOSE: Study objectives included evaluating the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics (PD), and antitumor activity of VX15/2503 in advanced solid tumor patients. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Weekly i.v. doses were administered on a 28-day cycle. Safety, immunogenicity, PK, efficacy, T-cell membrane-associated SEMA4D (cSEMA4D) expression and saturation, soluble SEMA4D (sSEMA4D) serum levels, and serum biomarker levels were evaluated. RESULTS: Forty-two patients were enrolled into seven sequential cohorts and an expansion cohort (20 mg/kg). VX15/2503 was well tolerated. Treatment-related adverse events were primarily grade 1 or 2 and included nausea (14.3%) and fatigue (11.9%); arthralgia, decreased appetite, infusion-related reaction, and pyrexia were each 7.3%. One pancreatic cancer patient (15 mg/kg) experienced a Grade 3 dose-limiting toxicity; elevated γ-glutamyl transferase. Complete cSEMA4D saturation was generally observed at serum antibody concentrations ≥ 0.3 μg/mL, resulting in decreased cSEMA4D expression. Soluble SEMA4D levels increased with dose and infusion number. Neutralizing anti-VX15/2503 antibodies led to treatment discontinuation for 1 patient. VX15/2503 Cmax and AUC generally increased with dose and dose number. One patient (20 mg/kg) experienced a partial response, 19 patients (45.2%) exhibited SD for ≥ 8 weeks, and 8 (19%) had SD for ≥ 16 weeks. Subjects with elevated B/T lymphocytes exhibited longer progression-free survival. CONCLUSIONS: VX15/2503 was well tolerated and produced expected PD effects. The correlation between immune cell levels at baseline and progression-free survival is consistent with an immune-mediated mechanism of action. Future investigations will be in combination with immunomodulatory agents. ©2015 American Association for Cancer Research.
PURPOSE: Study objectives included evaluating the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics (PD ), and antitumor activity of VX15/2503 in advanced solid tumor patients . EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Weekly i.v. doses were administered on a 28-day cycle. Safety, immunogenicity, PK, efficacy, T-cell membrane-associated SEMA4D (cSEMA4D) expression and saturation, soluble SEMA4D (sSEMA4D) serum levels, and serum biomarker levels were evaluated. RESULTS: Forty-two patients were enrolled into seven sequential cohorts and an expansion cohort (20 mg/kg). VX15/2503 was well tolerated. Treatment-related adverse events were primarily grade 1 or 2 and included nausea (14.3%) and fatigue (11.9%); arthralgia , decreased appetite, infusion-related reaction, and pyrexia were each 7.3%. One pancreatic cancer patient (15 mg/kg) experienced a Grade 3 dose-limiting toxicity ; elevated γ-glutamyl transferase. Complete cSEMA4D saturation was generally observed at serum antibody concentrations ≥ 0.3 μg/mL, resulting in decreased cSEMA4D expression. Soluble SEMA4D levels increased with dose and infusion number. Neutralizing anti-VX15/2503 antibodies led to treatment discontinuation for 1 patient . VX15/2503 Cmax and AUC generally increased with dose and dose number. One patient (20 mg/kg) experienced a partial response, 19 patients (45.2%) exhibited SD for ≥ 8 weeks, and 8 (19%) had SD for ≥ 16 weeks. Subjects with elevated B/T lymphocytes exhibited longer progression-free survival. CONCLUSIONS: VX15/2503 was well tolerated and produced expected PD effects. The correlation between immune cell levels at baseline and progression-free survival is consistent with an immune-mediated mechanism of action. Future investigations will be in combination with immunomodulatory agents. ©2015 American Association for Cancer Research.
Entities: Disease
Gene
Species
Mesh: See more »
Substances: See more »
Year: 2015
PMID: 26446947 DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-15-0431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 1078-0432 Impact factor: 12.531