4.6 Article

Safety, Tolerability, and Potential Clinical Activity of a Glucocorticoid-Induced TNF Receptor-Related Protein Agonist Alone or in Combination With Nivolumab for Patients With Advanced Solid Tumors A Phase 1/2a Dose-Escalation and Cohort-Expansion Clinical Trial

Journal

JAMA ONCOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages 100-107

Publisher

AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2019.3848

Keywords

-

Categories

Funding

  1. Bristol-Myers Squibb

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This open-label, phase 1/2a study evaluates the safety and activity of fully human glucocorticoid-induced tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor-related protein agonist immunoglobulin G1 monoclonal antibody BMS-986156 with or without nivolumab in patients with advanced solid tumors. Importance Multiple immunostimulatory agonist antibodies have been clinically tested in solid tumors to evaluate the role of targeting glucocorticoid-induced tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor-related protein in anticancer treatments. Objective To evaluate the safety and activity of the fully human glucocorticoid-induced TNF receptor-related protein agonist IgG1 monoclonal antibody BMS-986156 with or without nivolumab in patients with advanced solid tumors. Design, Setting, and Participants This global, open-label, phase 1/2a study of BMS-986156 with or without nivolumab enrolled 292 patients 18 years or older with advanced solid tumors and an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 1 or less. Prior checkpoint inhibitor therapy was allowed. Monotherapy and combination dose-escalation cohorts ran concurrently to guide expansion doses beginning October 16, 2015; the study is ongoing. Interventions The protein agonist BMS-986156 was administered intravenously at a dose of 10, 30, 100, 240, or 800 mg every 2 weeks as monotherapy, and in the combination group 30, 100, 240, or 800 mg plus 240 mg of nivolumab every 2 weeks; same-dose cohorts were pooled for analysis. One cohort also received 480 mg of BMS-986156 plus 480 mg of nivolumab every 4 weeks. Main Outcomes and Measures The primary end points were safety, tolerability, and dose-limiting toxic effects. Additional end points included antitumor activity per Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors, version 1.1, and exploratory biomarker analyses. Results With a follow-up range of 1.4 to 101.7 weeks (follow-up ongoing), 34 patients (16 women and 18 men; median age, 56.6 years [range, 28-75 years]) received monotherapy (4 patients completed initial treatment), and 258 patients (140 women and 118 men; median age, 60 years [range, 21-87 years]) received combination therapy (65 patients completed initial treatment). No grade 3 to 5 treatment-related adverse events occurred with BMS-986156 monotherapy; grade 3 to 4 treatment-related adverse events occurred in 24 patients (9.3%) receiving BMS-986156 plus nivolumab, with no grade 5 treatment-related adverse events. One dose-limiting toxic effect (grade 4 elevated creatine phosphokinase levels) occurred in a patient receiving 800 mg of BMS-986156 plus 240 mg of nivolumab every 2 weeks; BMS-986156 with or without nivolumab exhibited linear pharmacokinetics with dose-related increase after a single dose. Peripheral T-cell and natural killer-cell proliferation increased after administration of BMS-986156 with or without nivolumab. No consistent and significant modulation of intratumoral CD8(+) T cells and FoxP3(+) regulatory T cells was observed. No responses were seen with BMS-986156 alone; objective response rates ranged from 0% to 11.1% (1 of 9) across combination therapy cohorts, with a few responses observed in patients previously treated with anti-programmed death receptor (ligand) 1 therapy. Conclusions and Relevance Based on this cohort, BMS-986156 appears to have had a manageable safety profile, and BMS-986156 plus nivolumab demonstrated safety and efficacy comparable to historical data reported for nivolumab monotherapy. Question Is the glucocorticoid-induced tumor necrosis factor receptor-related protein agonist BMS-986156 treatment with or without nivolumab tolerable and clinically active in patients with advanced solid tumors? Findings In this open-label, phase 1/2a study of 292 treated patients with advanced solid tumors (69 completed initial treatment), BMS-986156 therapy had a tolerable safety profile; combination therapy had a similar safety profile to that of nivolumab. No responses were seen with monotherapy; however, in combination therapy, response rates were comparable to those historically observed with nivolumab (<15% across tumor types). Meaning This study represents the largest data set on glucocorticoid-induced tumor necrosis factor receptor-related protein agonism with or without nivolumab to our knowledge; a clear signal has not emerged demonstrating that glucocorticoid-induced tumor necrosis factor receptor-related protein agonism may be an effective therapeutic strategy in a broad patient population.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available