4.7 Article

Initial Phase I Safety Study of Gedatolisib plus Cofetuzumab Pelidotin for Patients with Metastatic Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

Journal

CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 15, Pages 3235-3241

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-21-3078

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Funding

  1. NIH/NCI [R21CA229951]
  2. Breast Cancer Research Foundation
  3. 100 Voices of Hope
  4. Vera Bradley Foundation for Breast Cancer Research
  5. Catherine Peachey Fund
  6. Indiana University Precision Health Initiative
  7. Pfizer

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The combination of gedatolisib and cofetuzumab pelidotin, targeting both the PI3K and Wnt pathways, demonstrates promising clinical activity in metastatic TNBC. This phase I clinical trial shows that the treatment is well tolerated and has potential efficacy in inhibiting disease progression.
Purpose: The PI3K pathway is dysregulated in the majority of triple-negative breast cancers (TNBC), yet single-agent inhibition of PI3K has been ineffective in TNBC. PI3K inhibition leads to an immediate compensatory upregulation of the Wnt pathway. Dual targeting of both pathways is highly synergistic against TNBC models in vitro and in vivo. We initiated a phase I clinical trial combining gedatolisib, a pan-class I isoform PI3K/mTOR inhibitor, and cofetuzumab pelidotin, an antibody-drug conjugate against the cell-surface PTK7 protein (Wnt pathway coreceptor) with an auristatin payload. Patients and Methods: Participants (pt) had metastatic TNBC or estrogen receptor (ER) low (ER and PgR < 5%, HER2-negative) breast cancer, and had received at least one prior chemotherapy for advanc-ed disease. The primary objective was safety. Secondary endpoints included overall response rate (ORR), clinical benefit at 18 weeks (CB18), progression-free survival (PFS), and correlative analyses. Results: A total of 18 pts were enrolled in three dose cohorts: gedatolisib 110 mg weekly + cofetuzumab pelidotin 1.4 mg/kg every 3 weeks (n = 4), 180 mg + 1.4 mg/kg (n = 3), and 180 mg + 2.8 mg/kg (n = 11). Nausea, anorexia, fatigue, and mucositis were common but rarely reached & GE;grade 3 severity. Myelosuppression was uncommon. ORR was 16.7% (3/18). An additional 3 pts had stable disease (of these 2 had stable disease for > 18 weeks); CB18 was 27.8%. Median PFS was 2.0 months (95% confidence interval for PFS: 1.2-6.2). Pts with clinical benefit were enriched with genomic alterations in the PI3K and PTK7 pathways. Conclusions: The combination of gedatolisib + cofetuzumab pelidotin was well tolerated and demonstrated promising clinical activity. Further investigation of this drug combination in meta-static TNBC is warranted.

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