4.7 Article

Futibatinib, an Irreversible FGFR1-4 Inhibitor, in Patients with Advanced Solid Tumors Harboring FGF/FGFR Aberrations: A Phase I Dose-Expansion Study

Journal

CANCER DISCOVERY
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages 402-415

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-21-0697

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Funding

  1. Taiho Oncology, Inc.
  2. Taiho Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.
  3. Taiho Oncology

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Futibatinib, a selective FGFR1-4 inhibitor, showed clinical activity in various solid tumors, particularly in FGFR2 fusion/rearrangement-positive intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma. It also demonstrated efficacy in patients who developed resistance to prior FGFR inhibitors. These findings provide a basis for further clinical trials and highlight the importance of genomic profiling in identifying patients who may benefit from targeted therapy.
Futibatinib, a highly selective, irreversible FGFR1-4 inhibitor, was evaluated in a large multihistology phase I dose-expansion trial that enrolled 197 patients with advanced solid tumors. Futibatinib demonstrated an objective response rate (ORR) of 13.7%, with responses in a broad spectrum of tumors (cholangiocarcinoma and gastric, urothelial, central nervous system, head and neck, and breast cancer) bearing both known and previously uncharacterized FGFR1-3 aberrations. The greatest activity was observed in FGFR2 fusion/rearrangement-positive intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ORR, 25.4%). Some patients with acquired resistance to a prior FGFR inhibitor also experienced responses with futibatinib. Futibatinib demonstrated a manageable safety profile. The most common treatment-emergent adverse events were hyperphosphatemia (81.2%), diarrhea (33.5%), and nausea (30.4%). These results formed the basis for ongoing futibatinib phase II/III trials and demonstrate the potential of genomically selected early-phase trials to help identify molecular subsets likely to benefit from targeted therapy. SIGNIFICANCE: This phase I dose-expansion trial demonstrated clinical activity and tolerability of the irreversible FGFR1-4 inhibitor futibatinib across a broad spectrum of FGFR-aberrant tumors. These results formed the rationale for ongoing phase II/III futibatinib trials in cholangiocarcinoma, breast cancer, gastroesophageal cancer, and a genomically selected disease-agnostic population.

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