Identifying androgen receptor (AR) and genomic characteristics that define populations of patients with mHSPC who benefit from early PARP inhibition therapy with talazoparib.

Authors

null

Saro Kasparian

City of Hope, Duarte, CA

Saro Kasparian , Leanne Burnham , Rick Kittles , Zj Sun , Fornati Bedell , Justin Tran , Min Li , Tanya B. Dorff

Organizations

City of Hope, Duarte, CA, City of Hope, Pasadena, CA

Research Funding

Pharmaceutical/Biotech Company
Pfizer

Background: A minority of men with mCRPC, those with DNA repair mutations, can benefit from PARP inhibitor therapy. In addition to DNA repair, PARP is used by cancer cells to interact with other cellular mechanisms including androgen receptors (AR). The next generation PARP inhibitor talazoparib can, in addition to inhibiting DNA repair, trap PARP, preventing it from carrying out its other functions. As progression in mHSPC is based on AR escape mechanisms, we predict that early exposure to PARP inhibition will delay progression. In addition, AR characteristics and function vary by ethnic populations. AR expression is inversely related with the number of polymorphic CAG repeats. As African American (AfrAm) men commonly have shorter CAG repeats in their AR, they may experience different response duration, but have been under-represented in clinical trials. Furthermore, CAG repeats may be associated with greater signaling through pathways such as wnt and Myc, which is associated with aggressive disease. Thus, studying intensified up-front therapy in a diverse prostate cancer population is a critical unmet need. Methods: 70 subjects will be treated with ADT + abiraterone + talazoparib. Outreach by our Division of Health Equities and accrual at community satellites located near diverse populations will be enlisted to accrue a target of 30% African American. Talazoparib will be dosed at 1mg daily (0.75 mg in renal insufficiency). LHRH and abiraterone formulations will be left to physician’s choice. PSA and safety labs will be checked every 4 weeks for the first 12 weeks. Imaging will be performed every 12 weeks for the first year then every 24 weeks if PSA is decreasing, or 12 weeks if rising. Data safety monitoring for toxicity after every 10 subjects have been accrued. Diversity of accrual will be evaluated after 30 subjects are enrolled; amendments will be made if the diversity goal is not achieved. Tissue genomics and ctDNA will be measured at baseline; ctDNA will be repeated after 4 weeks and at castration resistance. Endpoints: Primary: PSA nadir at 7 months has been found to be associated with overall survival and is achieved by 55% of men with mHSPC with ADT + abiraterone. With 70 subjects there is 97% power to confirm improved nadir rate of 75%, and 83% power to determine a nadir rate >70%. Secondary endpoints include objective response by RECIST 1.1 for subjects with measurable disease. radiographic progression free survival. Correlative objectives include comparing outcomes in subsets of men with high vs low number of AR CAG repeats, men with genomic alterations, and the change in ctDNA alteration fractions from baseline to 4 weeks and at progression. Progress: The trial is open to accrual as of Feb 2021. Sponsor: Pfizer/ Prostate Cancer Foundation RFP Clinical trial information: NCT04734730

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 Details

Meeting

2021 ASCO Annual Meeting

Session Type

Poster Session

Session Title

Genitourinary Cancer—Prostate, Testicular, and Penile

Track

Genitourinary Cancer—Prostate, Testicular, and Penile

Sub Track

Prostate Cancer– Advanced/Hormone-Sensitive

Clinical Trial Registration Number

NCT04734730

Citation

J Clin Oncol 39, 2021 (suppl 15; abstr TPS5097)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2021.39.15_suppl.TPS5097

Abstract #

TPS5097

Poster Bd #

Online Only

Abstract Disclosures

Similar Abstracts

Abstract

2024 ASCO Genitourinary Cancers Symposium

Financial toxicity from PARP inhibitors in castrate-resistant prostate cancer.

First Author: David Joseph Benjamin

First Author: Emily Nizialek

First Author: Praful Ravi

First Author: Junlong Zhuang