| Literature DB >> 31619463 |
Franck Morschhauser1, Jean-Pascal Machiels2, Gilles Salles3,4, Sylvie Rottey5, Simon A J Rule6, David Cunningham7, Frederic Peyrade8, Christophe Fruchart9, Hendrik-Tobias Arkenau10, Isabelle Genvresse11, Li Liu12, Karl Köchert11, Kui Shen12, Christoph Kneip11, Carol E Peña12, Joachim Grevel13, Jun Zhang12, Galia Cisternas11, Susanne Reschke11, Camille Granvil12, Ahmad Awada14.
Abstract
The PI3K inhibitor copanlisib has efficacy and manageable safety in patients with indolent lymphoma and solid tumors. Pharmacodynamic effects relative to copanlisib dose and plasma exposure were evaluated. Patients with lymphoma or solid tumors received copanlisib 0.4 or 0.8 mg/kg on days 1, 8, and 15 of a 28-day cycle. Primary variables were maximum changes in phosphorylated AKT (pAKT) levels in platelet-rich plasma (PRP) and plasma glucose. Other evaluations included PI3K signaling markers and T-lymphocytes in paired tumor biopsies, the relationship between estimated plasma exposure and pharmacodynamic markers, response, and safety. Sixty-three patients received copanlisib. PRP pAKT levels showed sustained reductions from baseline following copanlisib [median inhibition: 0.4 mg/kg, 73.8% (range -94.9 to 144.0); 0.8 mg/kg, 79.6% (range -96.0 to 408.0)]. Tumor pAKT was reduced versus baseline with copanlisib 0.8 mg/kg in paired biopsy samples (P < 0.05). Dose-related transient plasma glucose elevations were observed. Estimated copanlisib plasma exposure significantly correlated with changes in plasma pAKT and glucose metabolism markers. There were two complete responses and six partial responses; seven of eight responders received copanlisib 0.8 mg/kg. Adverse events (all grade) included hyperglycemia (52.4%), fatigue (46.0%), and hypertension (41.3%). Copanlisib demonstrated dose-dependent pharmacodynamic evidence of target engagement and PI3K pathway modulation/inhibition in tumor and immune cells. Results support the use of copanlisib 0.8 mg/kg (or flat-dose equivalent of 60 mg) in solid tumors and lymphoma, and provide a biomarker hypothesis for studies of copanlisib combined with immune checkpoint inhibitors (NCT03711058). ©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31619463 DOI: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-19-0466
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer Ther ISSN: 1535-7163 Impact factor: 6.261