| Literature DB >> 34269152 |
Graham P Collins1, Tracy N Clevenger2, Kathleen A Burke3, Buyue Yang2, Alex MacDonald4, David Cunningham5, Christopher P Fox6, Andre Goy7, John Gribben8, Grzegorz S Nowakowski9, Mark Roschewski10, Julie M Vose11, Anusha Vallurupalli12, Jean Cheung2, Amelia Raymond3, Barrett Nuttall3, Dan Stetson3, Brian A Dougherty3, Stein Schalkwijk4, Larissa S Carnevalli13, Brandon Willis14, Lin Tao15, Elizabeth A Harrington16, Ahmed Hamdy2, Raquel Izumi2, J Elizabeth Pease17, Melanie M Frigault3, Ian Flinn18.
Abstract
In a phase 1b study of acalabrutinib (a covalent Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor) in combination with vistusertib (a dual mTORC1/2 inhibitor) in patients with relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), multiple ascending doses of the combination as intermittent or continuous schedules of vistusertib were evaluated. The overall response rate was 12% (3/25). The pharmacodynamic (PD) profile for acalabrutinib showed that BTK occupancy in all patients was >95%. In contrast, PD analysis for vistusertib showed variable inhibition of phosphorylated 4EBP1 (p4EBP1) without modulation of AKT phosphorylation (pAKT). The pharmacokinetic (PK)/PD relationship of vistusertib was direct for TORC1 inhibition (p4EBP1) but did not correlate with TORC2 inhibition (pAKT). Cell-of-origin subtyping or next-generation sequencing did not identify a subset of DLBCL patients with clinical benefit; however, circulating tumor DNA dynamics correlated with radiographic response. These data suggest that vistusertib does not modulate targets sufficiently to add to the clinical activity of acalabrutinib monotherapy. Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT03205046.Entities:
Keywords: Bruton tyrosine kinase; Richter transformation; gene expression profiling; genomic segmentation; lymphoma; mammalian target of rapamycin
Year: 2021 PMID: 34269152 DOI: 10.1080/10428194.2021.1938027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leuk Lymphoma ISSN: 1026-8022