A phase 2 study of dalantercept, an activin receptor-like kinase-1 ligand trap, in patients with recurrent or metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck.
By: Antonio Jimeno, Marshall R Posner, Lori J Wirth, Nabil F Saba, Roger B Cohen, Elizabeth C Popa, Athanassios Argiris, Kenneth F Grossmann, Ammar Sukari, Dawn Wilson, Xiaosha Zhang, Jade Sun, Chad Glasser, Kenneth M Attie, Matthew L Sherman, Susan S Pandya, Jared Weiss

Departments of Medicine and Otolaryngology, University of Colorado Cancer Center and Gates Center for Regenerative Medicine, Aurora, Colorado. antonio.jimeno@ucdenver.edu.
2016-4-14; doi: 10.1002/cncr.30317
Abstract

Background

Patients with platinum-refractory, recurrent or metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (RM-SCCHN) have limited options. Activin receptor-like kinase 1 (ALK1) is a type I receptor of the transforming growth factor β superfamily expressed on activated endothelial cells. Dalantercept is an ALK1 receptor fusion protein that acts as a ligand trap to block signaling through ALK1 and inhibits stages of angiogenesis involved in blood vessel maturation and stabilization. In a phase 1 study, dalantercept demonstrated clinical activity in patients with RM-SCCHN. The objective of the current study was sought to evaluate the activity of dalantercept in RM-SCCHN.

Methods

Forty-six patients received dalantercept at doses of 80 mg (n = 2), 0.6 mg/kg (n = 13), or 1.2 mg/kg (n = 31) subcutaneously every 3 weeks. The primary endpoint was the overall response rate according to Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST version 1.1). Secondary endpoints included progression-free survival and overall survival, safety and tolerability, and pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic assessments.

Results

Forty patients were evaluable for response (13 who received dalantercept 0.6 mg/kg and 27 who received dalantercept 1.2 mg/kg). The overall response rate was 5% (n = 2), and 35% of patients had stable disease; 44% of patients who received 1.2 mg/kg and 30.8% of those who received 0.6 mg/kg achieved disease control (partial response or stable disease). The median progression-fee survival was 1.4 months (95% confidence interval, 1.3-2.2 months), and the median overall survival was 7.1 months (95% confidence interval, 5.5-11.1 months). Drug-related adverse events (>15%) were anemia, fatigue, peripheral edema, headache, and hyponatremia.

Conclusions

In an unselected, heavily pretreated population of patients with RM-SCCHN, dalantercept monotherapy resulted in a favorable safety profile but only modest dose-dependent activity, and it did not meet the primary efficacy objective of the study. Cancer 2016. © 2016 American Cancer Society.



© 2016 American Cancer Society.

PMID:27648727






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