| Literature DB >> 34180037 |
Antoine Italiano1,2,3, Wilson H Miller4, Jean-Yves Blay5, Jourik A Gietema6, Yung-Jue Bang7, Linda R Mileshkin8, Hal W Hirte9, Brian Higgins10, Steven Blotner10, Gwen L Nichols10, Lin Chi Chen10, Claire Petry11, Qi Joy Yang12, Christophe Schmitt11, Candice Jamois11, Lillian L Siu13.
Abstract
Aim The oral MDM2 antagonist idasanutlin inhibits the p53-MDM2 interaction, enabling p53 activation, tumor growth inhibition, and increased survival in xenograft models. Methods We conducted a Phase I study of idasanutlin (microprecipitate bulk powder formulation) to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD), safety, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, food effect, and clinical activity in patients with advanced malignancies. Schedules investigated were once weekly for 3 weeks (QW × 3), once daily for 3 days (QD × 3), or QD × 5 every 28 days. We also analyzed p53 activation and the anti-proliferative effects of idasanutlin. Results The dose-escalation phase included 85 patients (QW × 3, n = 36; QD × 3, n = 15; QD × 5, n = 34). Daily MTD was 3200 mg (QW × 3), 1000 mg (QD × 3), and 500 mg (QD × 5). Most common adverse events were diarrhea, nausea/vomiting, decreased appetite, and thrombocytopenia. Dose-limiting toxicities were nausea/vomiting and myelosuppression; myelosuppression was more frequent with QD dosing and associated with pharmacokinetic exposure. Idasanutlin exposure was approximately dose proportional at low doses, but less than dose proportional at > 600 mg. Although inter-patient variability in exposure was high with all regimens, cumulative idasanutlin exposure over the whole 28-day cycle was greatest with a QD × 5 regimen. No major food effect on pharmacokinetic exposure occurred. MIC-1 levels were higher with QD dosing, increasing in an exposure-dependent manner. Best response was stable disease in 30.6% of patients, prolonged (> 600 days) in 2 patients with sarcoma. Conclusions Idasanutlin demonstrated dose- and schedule-dependent p53 activation with durable disease stabilization in some patients. Based on these findings, the QD × 5 schedule was selected for further development. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT01462175 (ClinicalTrials.gov), October 31, 2011.Entities:
Keywords: Cis-imidazoline analog; Idasanutlin; MDM2 antagonist; MIC-1; Nutlin; p53 activation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34180037 PMCID: PMC8541972 DOI: 10.1007/s10637-021-01141-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Invest New Drugs ISSN: 0167-6997 Impact factor: 3.850
Fig. 1Study design and treatment allocation schedules. A Study overview. B Treatment allocation for QW × 3 schedule (schedule A). C Treatment allocation for QD × 3 and QD × 5 schedules (schedule B). For the weekly regimen (schedule A), idasanutlin was administered orally at a total daily dose of 100–3200 mg once weekly for 3 weeks followed by 13 days of rest. For the daily regimens (schedule B), idasanutlin was administered orally at a total daily dose of 1000 mg or 1600 mg daily for 3 days followed by 25 days of rest, or at a total daily dose of 100–1200 mg daily for 5 days followed by 23 days of rest. Arrows indicate the sequence of opening the cohorts (panels B and C). Gray boxes indicate cohorts with 3 planned dosing days per cycle only. AE, adverse event; BID, twice daily; EWOC, escalation with overdose control; QD, once daily; QW, once weekly. a Not all EWOC cohorts had associated biomarker evaluations. bOne patient was dosed BID. cPatients were dosed BID
Overview of AEs
| Weekly dosing (QW × 3)a | Daily dosingb | Food effect cohort | Apoptosis cohort | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| QD × 3 | QD × 5 | |||||
| Total no. of events | ||||||
| SAEs, n | 10 | 12 | 27 | 2 | 2 | 53 |
| DLT AEs, n | 4 | 8 | 17 | 0 | 2 | 31 |
| Deaths (due to fatal AE or PD), n (%) | 2 (5.6) | 0 | 4 (11.8) | 1 (10.0) | 0 | 7 (7.1) |
| No. of patients with ≥ 1 event, n (%) | ||||||
| AE | 36 (100.0) | 15 (100.0) | 34 (100.0) | 10 (100.0) | 4 (100.0) | 99 (100.0) |
| Related AE | 36 (100.0) | 15 (100.0) | 34 (100.0) | 10 (100.0) | 4 (100.0) | 99 (100.0) |
| Grade ≥ 3 AE | 21 (58.3) | 11 (73.5) | 25 (73.5) | 4 (40.0) | 2 (50.0) | 63 (63.6) |
| SAE | 9 (25.0) | 7 (46.7) | 13 (38.2) | 2 (20.0) | 1 (25.0) | 32 (32.3) |
| Related SAE | 4 (11.1) | 7 (46.7) | 13 (38.2) | 0 | 1 (25.0) | 25 (25.3) |
| DLT AE | 3 (8.3) | 6 (40.0) | 11 (32.4) | 0 | 1 (25.0) | 21 (21.2) |
| AE with fatal outcome | 1 (2.8) | 0 | 1 (2.9) | 0 | 0 | 2 (20.0) |
| AE leading to treatment withdrawal | 4 (11.1) | 3 (20.0) | 10 (29.4) | 1 (10.0) | 0 | 18 (18.2) |
| AE leading to dose modification/interruption | 16 (44.4) | 7 (46.7) | 18 (52.9) | 2 (20.0) | 1 (25.0) | 44 (44.4) |
AE adverse event, DLT dose-limiting toxicity, PD progressive disease, QD once daily, QW once weekly, SAE serious adverse event
aWeekly dosing schedule, including biomarker cohorts, except those enrolled in the food effect sub-study
bDaily dosing schedules (QD × 3 or QD × 5), including biomarker cohorts, except those enrolled in the apoptosis cohort
Fig. 2Idasanutlin pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. A Mean plasma concentration–time profiles of idasanutlin following oral administration of once daily dose for 5 days; data for last dose on day 5 (dose escalation, biomarker, and apoptosis cohort). B Scatterplots of idasanutlin exposure versus administered dose on first and last days of idasanutlin treatment. Data for last dosing day do not include patients who received QW × 3 dosing. C Plasma concentration–time profiles of idasanutlin following oral administration of a single 800-mg dose in the fasted and fed state. Data are presented as arithmetic mean values (95% confidence interval); n = 10. D Mean serum concentration–time profiles of MIC-1 following oral administration of once daily dose of idasanutlin for 5 days; data for last dose on day 5 (dose escalation, biomarker, and apoptosis cohort). Arithmetic means. AUC0-12 h, area under curve from 0 to 12 h; Cmax, maximum plasma concentration; QD, once daily; QW, once weekly
Fig. 3Simulated MIC-1 release over 28 days following QD or QW regimen. The black line is the median of the predicted MIC-1 concentrations; the gray area is the 90% prediction interval around the median. Results are simulations with the indirect PK/MIC-1 model (stimulation of MIC-1 release). MIC-1, macrophage inhibitory cytokine 1; QD, once daily; QW, once weekly
Fig. 4Relationship between idasanutlin exposure and probability of occurrence of grade ≥ 3 neutropenia and grade ≥ 3 thrombocytopenia during cycle 1. Idasanutlin exposure is the cumulative area under the curve over 28 days (AUC0-28d) in ng/mL·h (individual exposures were derived using a population PK module developed on data from different disease types [see Supplementary Methods]). Neutropenia grade ≥ 3 events are the lowest absolute neutrophil count value < 1 × 109 cells/L with 28 days of treatment. Thrombocytopenia grade ≥ 3 events are the lowest platelet count < 50 × 109 cells/L with 28 days of treatment