Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, NY
Matthew Ingham , Michelle R. Mahoney , Fabrizio Remotti , Ardaman Shergill , Mark Andrew Dickson , Richard F. Riedel , Steven Attia , Anthony D. Elias , David A. Liebner , Mark Agulnik , Katherine Anne Thornton , Varun Monga , Brian Andrew Van Tine , Gary K. Schwartz , William D. Tap
Background: Soft tissue sarcoma (STS) is a heterogeneous malignancy of connective tissue. Although mTOR is implicated in STS pathogenesis, clinical activity from mTORC1 inhibitors is modest. M, a potent selective mTORC1/mTORC2 inhibitor, was more effective in STS preclinical models than inhibitors of mTORC1, IGF1R and mTORC1+IGF1R, owing to more complete suppression of PI3K/AKT/mTOR and abrogation of feedback AKT activation. P, an oral multikinase inhibitor, is approved for non-adipocytic STS and often used after progression (PD) on chemotherapy. In phase 1, the RP2D of M was 30 mg weekly. A091304 was to evaluate M as a novel targeted therapy for STS. Methods: In A091304, pts were randomized 1:1 to M 30 mg weekly or P 800 mg daily. Eligibility required Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group PS ≤ 1, progression on ≥ 1 prior chemotherapy and specific STS subtypes (cohort 1: UPS; 2: LMS; 3: MPNST, SS). Crossover to M was allowed after PD on P. 1° endpoint was progression-free survival (PFS). Assuming median PFS of P was 4.6 months (mo), 98 pts yielded 80% power to detect a hazard ratio of 0.66 favoring M [1-sided test, alpha = 0.15] and including 1 planned futility analysis. 2° endpoints were response rate, clinical benefit rate (CBR) at 4 mo and safety. After 4 of the first 12 pts randomized to P experienced ≥ grade (gr) 3 toxicity, the study was amended to begin at P 400 mg, allowing titration to 800 per investigator discretion. Results: After protocol amendment, 114 pt underwent randomization (M: 56, P: 58), and 111 initiated treatment. Median PFS was 2 mo for M and 2.1 mo for P (HR = 1.47; 1-sided 85% upper confidence boundary = 1.85), with 2 partial responses in each arm. CBR was 5.4% for M and 13.8% for P. Median OS was 10.7 mo for M and 13.9 mo for P (HR = 1.41; 95% CI 0.80-2.49). 26/43 pt with PD on P crossed over to M. Median PFS after crossover was 1.8 mo (95% CI 1.5-3.5). Gr 3 drug-related adverse events (AEs) occurred in 36% on M and 41% on P; gr 4 toxicity was rare. AEs were consistent with known effects of M and P. Conclusions: P at 400 mg daily (allowing escalation to 800 mg per investigator discretion) demonstrated a shorter PFS as compared prior randomized studies with P. Despite this, M failed to demonstrate superior clinical activity as compared to P at the interim analysis. Further work will examine activity within histology-specific cohorts and evaluate available tissue samples for evidence of pharmacodynamic activity. Support: U10CA180821, U10CA180882, U10CA180888, UG1CA233324 (SWOG); https://acknowledgments.alliancefound.org. Clinical trial information: NCT02601209.
Disclaimer
This material on this page is ©2024 American Society of Clinical Oncology, all rights reserved. Licensing available upon request. For more information, please contact licensing@asco.org
Abstract Disclosures
2023 ASCO Annual Meeting
First Author: Lee D. Cranmer
2021 ASCO Annual Meeting
First Author: Makoto Endo
2023 ASCO Annual Meeting
First Author: Federica Grosso
2021 ASCO Annual Meeting
First Author: Daniel Pink