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Mocetinostat for patients with previously treated, locally advanced/metastatic urothelial carcinoma and inactivating alterations of acetyltransferase genes

Authors :
Peter H. O'Donnell
Richard Martin Bambury
Richard C. Chao
Joaquim Bellmunt
Elizabeth A. Guancial
Guru Sonpavde
Noah M. Hahn
Joel Picus
Amir Mortazavi
James G. Christensen
Diane Potvin
Demiana Faltaos
Ajjai Alva
Jonathan E. Rosenberg
Petros Grivas
Sumanta K. Pal
Sumati Gupta
Matthew I. Milowsky
Lowell L. Hart
Source :
Cancer
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Wiley, 2018.

Abstract

Background The authors evaluated mocetinostat (a class I/IV histone deacetylase inhibitor) in patients with urothelial carcinoma harboring inactivating mutations or deletions in CREB binding protein [CREBBP] and/or E1A binding protein p300 [EP300] histone acetyltransferase genes in a single‐arm, open‐label phase 2 study. Methods Eligible patients with platinum‐treated, advanced/metastatic disease received oral mocetinostat (at a dose of 70 mg 3 times per week [TIW] escalating to 90 mg TIW) in 28‐day cycles in a 3‐stage study (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT02236195). The primary endpoint was the objective response rate. Results Genomic testing was feasible in 155 of 175 patients (89%). Qualifying tumor mutations were CREBBP (15%), EP300 (8%), and both CREBBP and EP300 (1%). A total of 17 patients were enrolled into stage 1 (the intent‐to‐treat population); no patients were enrolled in subsequent stages. One partial response was observed (11% [1 of 9 patients; the population that was evaluable for efficacy comprised 9 of the 15 planned patients]); activity was deemed insufficient to progress to stage 2 (null hypothesis: objective response rate of ≤15%). All patients experienced ≥1 adverse event, most commonly nausea (13 of 17 patients; 77%) and fatigue (12 of 17 patients; 71%). The median duration of treatment was 46 days; treatment interruptions (14 of 17 patients; 82%) and dose reductions (5 of 17 patients; 29%) were common. Mocetinostat exposure was lower than anticipated (dose‐normalized maximum serum concentration [Cmax] after TIW dosing of 0.2 ng/mL/mg). Conclusions To the authors’ knowledge, the current study represents the first clinical trial using genomic‐based selection to identify patients with urothelial cancer who are likely to benefit from selective histone deacetylase inhibition. Mocetinostat was associated with significant toxicities that impacted drug exposure and may have contributed to modest clinical activity in these pretreated patients. The efficacy observed was considered insufficient to warrant further investigation of mocetinostat as a single agent in this setting.<br />After the genomic‐based selection of patients with urothelial cancer with inactivating mutations/deletions in the histone acetyltransferase genes CREBBP and/or EP300, single‐agent mocetinostat appears to be associated with significant toxicities that limit drug exposure. This may have contributed to the limited activity noted in the current phase 2 study (response rate of 11%) among heavily pretreated patients with platinum‐refractory disease.

Details

ISSN :
10970142 and 0008543X
Volume :
125
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0594753902a62c3aef03812c7556ce59
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.31817