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Combined PD-1, BRAF and MEK inhibition in BRAFV600E colorectal cancer: a phase 2 trial

Authors :
Jun Tian
Jonathan H. Chen
Sherry X. Chao
Karin Pelka
Marios Giannakis
Julian Hess
Kelly Burke
Vjola Jorgji
Princy Sindurakar
Jonathan Braverman
Arnav Mehta
Tomonori Oka
Mei Huang
David Lieb
Maxwell Spurrell
Jill N. Allen
Thomas A. Abrams
Jeffrey W. Clark
Andrea C. Enzinger
Peter C. Enzinger
Samuel J. Klempner
Nadine J. McCleary
Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt
David P. Ryan
Matthew B. Yurgelun
Katie Kanter
Emily E. Van Seventer
Islam Baiev
Gary Chi
Joy Jarnagin
William B. Bradford
Edmond Wong
Alexa G. Michel
Isobel J. Fetter
Giulia Siravegna
Angelo J. Gemma
Arlene Sharpe
Shadmehr Demehri
Rebecca Leary
Catarina D. Campbell
Omer Yilmaz
Gad A. Getz
Aparna R. Parikh
Nir Hacohen
Ryan B. Corcoran
Source :
Nature Medicine. 29:458-466
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

While BRAF inhibitor combinations with EGFR and/or MEK inhibitors have improved clinical efficacy in BRAFV600E colorectal cancer (CRC), response rates remain low and lack durability. Preclinical data suggest that BRAF/MAPK pathway inhibition may augment the tumor immune response. We performed a proof-of-concept single-arm phase 2 clinical trial of combined PD-1, BRAF and MEK inhibition with sparatlizumab (PDR001), dabrafenib and trametinib in 37 patients with BRAFV600E CRC. The primary end point was overall response rate, and the secondary end points were progression-free survival, disease control rate, duration of response and overall survival. The study met its primary end point with a confirmed response rate (24.3% in all patients; 25% in microsatellite stable patients) and durability that were favorable relative to historical controls of BRAF-targeted combinations alone. Single-cell RNA sequencing of 23 paired pretreatment and day 15 on-treatment tumor biopsies revealed greater induction of tumor cell-intrinsic immune programs and more complete MAPK inhibition in patients with better clinical outcome. Immune program induction in matched patient-derived organoids correlated with the degree of MAPK inhibition. These data suggest a potential tumor cell-intrinsic mechanism of cooperativity between MAPK inhibition and immune response, warranting further clinical evaluation of optimized targeted and immune combinations in CRC. ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT03668431.

Details

ISSN :
1546170X and 10788956
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f4503ae8a502bac127cbff0a3ff92547
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-022-02181-8