4.8 Article

Safety and efficacy of avapritinib in advanced systemic mastocytosis: the phase 1 EXPLORER trial

Journal

NATURE MEDICINE
Volume 27, Issue 12, Pages 2183-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-021-01538-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Blueprint Medicines Corporation
  2. National Cancer Institute (National Institutes of Health (NIH)) [P30 CA016672]
  3. Stanford Cancer Institute Clinical Innovation Fund
  4. National Cancer Institute (NIH) [1UE5CA24674401, P01-CA214278-03]
  5. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NIH) [NIH-NCATS UL1TR001878]
  6. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NIH) [R01-HL-148014-01A1]
  7. Good Publication Practice (GPP3) guidelines

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The study evaluated the efficacy and safety of avapritinib in patients with AdvSM. Results showed that avapritinib induced deep and durable responses in patients at the recommended dose, demonstrating good tolerability.
Advanced systemic mastocytosis (AdvSM) is a rare hematologic neoplasm driven by the KIT D816V mutation and associated with poor survival. This phase 1 study (NCT02561988) evaluated avapritinib (BLU-285), a selective KIT D816V inhibitor, in patients with AdvSM. The primary endpoints were the maximum tolerated dose, recommended phase 2 dose and safety of avapritinib. Secondary endpoints included overall response rate and changes in measures of mast cell burden. Avapritinib was evaluated at doses of 30-400 mg once daily in 86 patients, 69 with centrally confirmed AdvSM. Maximum tolerated dose was not reached, and 200 mg and 300 mg daily were studied in dose-expansion cohorts. The most frequent adverse events observed were periorbital edema (69%), anemia (55%), diarrhea (45%), thrombocytopenia (44%) and nausea (44%). Intracranial bleeding occurred in 13% overall, but in only 1% of patients without severe thrombocytopenia (platelets <50 x 10(9)/l). In 53 response-evaluable patients, the overall response rate was 75%. The complete remission rate was 36%. Avapritinib elicited >= 50% reductions in marrow mast cells and serum tryptase in 92% and 99% of patients, respectively. Avapritinib induced deep and durable responses, including molecular remission of KIT D816V in patients with AdvSM, and was well tolerated at the recommended phase 2 dose of 200 mg daily.

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