Multi-center, single arm phase II study of the dual mTORC1/mTORC2 inhibitor vistusertib for patients with recurrent or progressive grade II-III meningiomas.

Authors

null

Scott Randall Plotkin

Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MA

Scott Randall Plotkin , Priya Kumthekar , Patrick Y. Wen , Frederick G. Barker II, Anat Stemmer-Rachamimov , Roberta L. Beauchamp , Justin T Jordan , Alona Muzikansky , Vijaya Ramesh

Organizations

Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MA, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL, Dana-Farber/Brigham and Women's Cancer Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA

Research Funding

U.S. National Institutes of Health
U.S. National Institutes of Health, Pharmaceutical/Biotech Company

Background: Grade II/III meningiomas represent about 20% of tumors and have increased rates of recurrence with no approved medical therapies. Historically, the progression-free survival at 6 months (PFS-6) for these tumors is 25%. The Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology (RANO) group identified a PFS-6 rate of > 35% to be of interest for trials of grade II/III meningioma. Methods: NF2 gene inactivation occurs in the majority of meningiomas and is associated with mTORC1 activation. Human studies of everolimus for neurofibromatosis 2 patients documented growth arrest in only a minority of tumors. Based on our studies showing mTORC2/SGK1 pathway activation in NF2-deficient meningiomas and the known paradoxical activation of the mTORC2/AKT pathway in meningiomas, we hypothesized that dual inhibition of mTORC1/2 would be superior in meningiomas. Treatment of primary meningioma cells with vistusertib led to decreased cell proliferation and showed greater efficacy than rapamycin, regardless of NF2 expression. We studied the effect of vistusertib in patients with progressive or recurrent grade II/III meningiomas (NCT03071874). Vistusertib was administered orally at 125mg twice daily on two consecutive days each week. MRIs were obtained every 2 cycles (1 cycle = 28 days). Tumor size was defined as the largest cross-sectional area. Progression was defined as ≥25% increase in the sum of products of all measurable lesions over smallest sum observed. The primary endpoint was PFS-6. Secondary endpoints included toxicity, radiographic response, and correlative studies including immunohistochemistry for mTORC1/2 pathway activation and genetic biomarkers. Results: Twenty-eight patients (13 female), with a median age of 58 years (range, 32 to 77 years), were enrolled in this multicenter study. The median Karnofsky performance status was 80. Twenty-five patients have been followed to six months or to tumor progression. The median duration of treatment was 6.5 month (range, 1-18 months). Four patients chose to discontinue treatment, 1 withdrew to intercurrent illness, and 1 was withdrawn due to non-compliance. PFS-6 is 51.5% (CI, 29.3% - 70.0%). Adverse events at least possibly related to vistusertib with frequency > 10% include nausea (54%); fatigue (36%); hypophosphatemia (29%); diarrhea, anorexia, dry mouth, and hypertriglyceridemia (all 14%); hypertension, vomiting, increased ALT, constipation, and weight loss (all 11%). Conclusions: Vistusertib treatment was associated with a PFS-6 rate that exceeds the RANO target of 35% for recurrent high-grade meningioma. The follow-up data continue to mature. Adverse events were tolerable in this patient population. Correlative studies to identify biological factors that correlate with response are under way. These data support the initiation of larger randomized studies of vistusertib in this setting. Clinical trial information: NCT03071874

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 Discussion Session

Session Title

Central Nervous System Tumors

Track

Central Nervous System Tumors

Sub Track

Primary CNS Tumors–Non-Glioma

Clinical Trial Registration Number

NCT03071874

Citation

J Clin Oncol 39, 2021 (suppl 15; abstr 2024)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2021.39.15_suppl.2024

Abstract #

2024

Abstract Disclosures

Similar Abstracts

Abstract

2024 ASCO Annual Meeting

Combined NF2/PTEN mutations as predictors of meningioma aggressiveness.

First Author: Om H. Gandhi

Abstract

2020 ASCO Virtual Scientific Program

Alliance A071401: Phase II trial of FAK inhibition in meningiomas with somatic NF2 mutations.

First Author: Priscilla Kaliopi Brastianos

First Author: Emeline Tabouret