A phase 2 study of tasisulam sodium (LY573636 sodium) as second-line treatment for patients with unresectable or metastatic melanoma
By: Kirkwood JM, Gonzalez R, Reintgen D, Clingan PR, McWilliams RR, de Alwis DP, Zimmermann A, Brown MP, Ilaria RL Jr, Millward MJ.

Melanoma and Skin Cancer Program, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. kirkwoodjm@pmc.edu.
Cancer. 2011 Mar 31. doi: 10.1002/cncr.26068.

Abstract

Background

Tasisulam sodium (hereafter, tasisulam) is a novel anticancer agent that induces apoptosis through the intrinsic pathway and has antiangiogenic activity in preclinical models. Tasisulam demonstrated activity across a broad range of tumors, including melanoma. The primary objective of this phase 2 study was to determine the objective response rate (ORR) in patients who had received 1 previous systemic chemotherapy for unresectable/metastatic melanoma; secondary objectives were to evaluate the clinical response rate (CRR), progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS), duration of response, safety, and pharmacokinetics.

Methods

Tasisulam was administered intravenously on Day 1 of 21-day cycles according to a lean body weight-based dosing algorithm targeting a peak plasma concentration (C(max) ) of 420 μg/mL.

Results

In 68 enrolled patients, the median age was 59 years (range, 26-83 years). No patients had a complete response (CR), 8 patients had a partial response (PR), and 24 patients had stable disease (SD); the ORR (CR + PR) was 11.8%, and the CRR (CR + PR + SD) was 47.1%. The median PFS was 2.6 months, and the median OS was 9.6 months. The predominant treatment-related grade 3/4 toxicity was thrombocytopenia (20.6% of patients). Tasisulam exhibited a biexponential disposition with a predicted distribution half-life of 0.3 hours to 2.8 hours and a median terminal elimination half-life of 10 days (consistent with the turnover of albumin), suggesting that tasisulam is very tightly bound to albumin.

Conclusions

Tasisulam administered at a targeted C(max) of 420 μg/mL on Day 1 of 21-day cycles demonstrated activity and tolerable toxicity as second-line treatment in malignant melanoma. These results led to a registration trial in metastatic melanoma. Cancer 2011;. © 2011 American Cancer Society.

Copyright © 2011 American Cancer Society.

PMID: 21456002 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher] Source: National Library of Medicine.







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