City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, Duarte, CA
Yung Lyou , Petros Grivas , Jonathan E. Rosenberg , Jean H. Hoffman-Censits , David I. Quinn , Daniel Peter Petrylak , Matt D. Galsky , Ulka N. Vaishampayan , Ugo De Giorgi , Sumati Gupta , Howard A. Burris III, Jessica Rearden , Yining Ye , Hao Wang , Susan Moran , Siamak Daneshmand , Dean F. Bajorin , Sumanta K. Pal
Background: Infigratinib (BGJ398) is a potent and selective FGFR1–3 inhibitor with significant clinical activity in aUC bearing FGFR3 alterations. A common adverse event is hyperphosphatemia, a class effect associated with FGFR1 inhibition. We sought to better understand the relationship between hyperphosphatemia and response to infigratinib in patients with aUC. Methods: Eligible patients had aUC with activating FGFR3 mutations/fusions and had received prior platinum-based chemotherapy, unless contraindicated. Patients received infigratinib 125 mg orally daily (3w on/1w off) until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. Calcium and phosphate levels within normal limits were required at enrollment. Efficacy was assessed by overall response rate (ORR) and disease control rate (DCR) based on RECIST 1.0 criteria. All patients received prophylaxis with the oral phosphate binder sevelamer. Hyperphosphatemia was defined as serum phosphorous >5.5 mg/dL, consistent with the threshold for action in the protocol. Results: Of the 67 patients enrolled, 48 (71.6%) had hyperphosphatemia on ≥1 post-baseline lab test. Efficacy findings in patients with vs without hyperphosphatemia were: ORR 33.3% (95% CI 20.4–48.4) vs 5.3% (95% CI 0.1–26.0), mPFS 4.9 months (95% CI 3.65–5.98) vs 1.84 months (95% CI 1.28–3.48), and mOS 8.74 months (95% CI 5.72–13.67) vs 7.62 months (95% CI 2.53–15.57). Median treatment length was 4.1 vs 1.4 months and mDOR was 5.0 vs 3.7 months for patients with vs without hyperphosphatemia, respectively. A landmark analysis at the 1-month mark was performed, and hyperphosphatemia (Y/N) was determined based on lab tests within the first month. The differences in efficacy outcomes were still observed. Conclusions: Hyperphosphatemia is a well-described class effect and pharmacodynamic biomarker of FGFR inhibitors, including infigratinib, and is generally reversible/easily managed with diet and phosphate binders. Our data support prior observations with FGFR inhibitors, suggesting that hyperphosphatemia is associated with treatment response and is not negatively associated with treatment length. Clinical trial information: NCT01004224
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