| Literature DB >> 31575541 |
Richard D Kim1, Debashis Sarker2, Tim Meyer3, Thomas Yau4, Teresa Macarulla5, Joong-Won Park6, Su Pin Choo7, Antoine Hollebecque8, Max W Sung9, Ho-Yeong Lim10, Vincenzo Mazzaferro11, Joerg Trojan12, Andrew X Zhu13, Jung-Hwan Yoon14, Sunil Sharma15, Zhong-Zhe Lin16, Stephen L Chan17, Sandrine Faivre18, Lynn G Feun19, Chia-Jui Yen20, Jean-Francois Dufour21, Daniel H Palmer22, Josep M Llovet9,23, Melissa Manoogian24, Meera Tugnait25, Nicolas Stransky25, Margit Hagel25, Nancy E Kohl25, Christoph Lengauer25, Cori Ann Sherwin25, Oleg Schmidt-Kittler25, Klaus P Hoeflich25, Hongliang Shi25, Beni B Wolf25, Yoon-Koo Kang26.
Abstract
Outcomes for patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remain poor despite recent progress in drug development. Emerging data implicate FGF19 as a potential HCC driver, suggesting its receptor, FGFR4, as a novel therapeutic target. We evaluated fisogatinib (BLU-554), a highly potent and selective oral FGFR4 inhibitor, in a phase I dose-escalation/dose-expansion study in advanced HCC using FGF19 expression measured by IHC as a biomarker for pathway activation. For dose escalation, 25 patients received 140 to 900 mg fisogatinib once daily; the maximum tolerated dose (600 mg once daily) was expanded in 81 patients. Fisogatinib was well tolerated; most adverse events were manageable, grade 1/2 gastrointestinal events, primarily diarrhea, nausea, and vomiting. Across doses, the overall response rate was 17% in FGF19-positive patients [median duration of response: 5.3 months (95% CI, 3.7-not reached)] and 0% in FGF19-negative patients. These results validate FGFR4 as a targetable driver in FGF19-positive advanced HCC. SIGNIFICANCE: Fisogatinib elicited clinical responses in patients with tumor FGF19 overexpression in advanced HCC. These results validate the oncogenic driver role of the FGFR4 pathway in HCC and the use of FGF19 as a biomarker for patient selection.See related commentary by Subbiah and Pal, p. 1646.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1631. ©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31575541 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-19-0555
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 39.397