Fulvestrant with or without the cyclin-dependent kinase 7 (CDK7) inhibitor samuraciclib in advanced hormone receptor positive (HR+) breast cancer after CDK4/6 inhibition: Phase II SUMIT-BC study.

Authors

Sonia Pernas

Sonia Pernas

Institut Català d'Oncologia, IDIBELL, L’Hospitalet, Barcelona, MA, Spain

Sonia Pernas , Carmen Hinojo , Javier Pascual , Sercan Aksoy , Glen Clack , Stuart McIntosh

Organizations

Institut Català d'Oncologia, IDIBELL, L’Hospitalet, Barcelona, MA, Spain, Hospital Universitario Marques de Valdecilla, Santander, Spain, Hospital Vithas Málaga, Malaga, Spain, Hacettepe University Institute of Oncology, Ankara, Turkey, Carrick Therapeutics, Dublin, Ireland

Research Funding

Carrick Therapeutics

Background: CDK7 enhances oncogene transcription and upregulates anti-apoptotic genes, accelerates the cell cycle via CDK phosphorylation, and activates estrogen receptors (ERs) that can drive resistance to hormonal therapy in cancer. CDK7 inhibition therefore represents a potential anticancer strategy in cancer. Samuraciclib (CT7001) is a small molecule, ATP competitive, selective oral inhibitor of CDK7 that inhibits these key effects of CDK7. Samuraciclib had a favorable safety profile and showed clinical activity when combined with fulvestrant in a phase I study in patients with HR+/HER2− advanced breast cancer (BC) who had previously been treated with a CDK4/6 inhibitor. Patients with no detectable TP53 mutation in ctDNA at baseline and those without baseline liver metastases appeared to have better outcomes. The instant release capsule formulation of samuraciclib used in this study released large amounts of samuraciclib high in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, which may have contributed to the observed low grade GI adverse events, which were managed with prophylaxis and counselling (1). Methods: A phase 2 open-label randomized study has been designed to evaluate the efficacy, safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), and quality of Life (QoL) of samuraciclib combined with fulvestrant compared to fulvestrant monotherapy (SUMIT-BC; NCT05963984). Eligible patients (n=60) are ≥18 years, have histologically or cytologically confirmed ER+/HER2− advanced or metastatic BC not amenable to resection or radiotherapy of curative intent, have received an aromatase inhibitor combined with a CDK4/6 inhibitor in the adjuvant or advanced setting, are receiving a luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone agonist if pre/perimenopausal, and have RECIST v1.1 evaluable disease. Prior SERD, mTOR inhibition, or chemotherapy for advanced BC are not permitted. All patients undergo baseline Guardant360 ctDNA analysis to establish TP53 and other mutation status. Patients are randomized 1:1:1 to fulvestrant alone (500 mg IM administered on days 1, 15 and 29 and then monthly), fulvestrant and samuraciclib 240 mg QD, or fulvestrant and samuraciclib 360 mg QD. In preparation for phase 3 development, a novel single tablet formulation of samuraciclib is used, which may enhance GI tolerability. Patients undergo RECIST v1.1 evaluation at baseline, every 8 weeks until week 48, and every 12 weeks thereafter. The primary endpoint is clinical benefit response at 24 weeks. Secondary endpoints are tolerability, progression free survival, overall response rate, duration of response, and PK of fulvestrant and samuraciclib. QoL (Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy - Breast questionnaire [FACT-B]) and correlations between TP53 mutation and efficacy/safety will be assessed. 1. Coombes et al. Nature Comms 2023. Clinical trial information: NCT05963984.

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2024 ASCO Annual Meeting

Session Type

Poster Session

Session Title

Breast Cancer—Metastatic

Track

Breast Cancer

Sub Track

Hormone Receptor-Positive

Clinical Trial Registration Number

NCT05963984

Citation

J Clin Oncol 42, 2024 (suppl 16; abstr TPS1126)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2024.42.16_suppl.TPS1126

Abstract #

TPS1126

Poster Bd #

101a

Abstract Disclosures