University of Colorado, Aurora, CO
Jodi A. Kagihara , Bradley Corr , Jose Maria Pacheco , S. Lindsey Davis , Christopher Hanyoung Lieu , Sunnie S. Kim , Antonio Jimeno , Amy M. Heim , John A. DeMattei , Gilad Gordon , Todd A. Triplett , S. Gail Eckhardt , James D. Winkler , Anthony D. Piscopio , Jennifer Robinson Diamond
Background: OKI-179 is a novel, oral pro-drug analog of largazole, a compound in the romidepsin-depsipeptide class of natural products. OKI-006, the active metabolite of OKI-179, inhibits HDAC 1,2,3 (IC50 = 1.2, 2.4, 2.0 nM, respectively), with no significant inhibition of Class IIa HDACs and has shown promising activity in preclinical models of solid tumors. We conducted a first-in-human dose escalation study of OKI-179 in patients with advanced solid tumors. Methods: Patients with advanced solid tumors, ECOG ≤1, normal QTc, and disease refractory to or with no available standard therapy options were treated with OKI-179 with either intermittent dosing (once daily for 4 days on 3 days off) or continuous dosing (once daily). Dose escalation was conducted using a standard 3+3 design. Pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) testing was performed at various time points after dosing. Results: As of Feb 4, 2021, 26 patients (19 female, 7 male) were enrolled with mean age of 63 (range 41-83). Patients received a median of 5 (range 1-11) prior lines of therapy and most common tumor types included pancreatic (N = 5), breast (N = 4), lung (N = 4), and ovarian cancer (N = 4). Twenty patients were treated in intermittent dosing cohorts from 30-450 mg. One DLT (Grade 2 [G2] thrombocytopenia) occurred in the 450 mg cohort which was expanded to 6 patients without subsequent DLTs. Six patients were treated in 2 continuous dosing cohorts of 200 mg and 300 mg. Two of 3 patients in the 300 mg cohort had DLTs of G3-4 thrombocytopenia and no DLTs were observed in 3 patients treated at 200 mg PO daily. The most common adverse events (AEs) were nausea (62%), fatigue (42%), anemia (39%), anorexia (27%), and vomiting (23%). These AE’s were G1-2 except for G3 anemia (12%), G3 fatigue (12%), and G3 anorexia (4%). No other G4-5 treatment-related AEs occurred. Median time on study was 79 days and best response was stable disease (SD) in 10 of 24 patients evaluable for efficacy (42%). Prolonged SD was observed in patients with platinum-resistant serous ovarian cancer (446 days) and adenoid cystic nasopharyngeal carcinoma (256 days). OKI-006 achieved consistent exposure with Cmax> 2,000 ng/ml and AUC > 8,000 hr*ng/ml, well above the targeted exposure for efficacy based on pre-clinical studies in murine models. Tmax was 2 hours and T1/2 was 6-8 hours. OKI-179 treatment resulted in > 3X increased T cell histone H3K9 and H3K27 acetylation within circulating PBMCs at doses of 180 - 450 mg. Conclusions: OKI-179 has a manageable safety profile, with thrombocytopenia being the on-target DLT. It has a favorable PK profile and demonstrated on-target PD effects at tolerable doses. The MTD and RP2D for OKI-179 was 450 mg daily for intermittent dosing and 200 mg daily for continuous dosing. Phase 2 studies are being designed, with a focus on combination with endocrine therapy in ER+ breast cancer and in NRAS-mutant melanoma. Clinical trial information: NCT03931681
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