4.3 Article

Translational pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modeling of preclinical and clinical data of the oral MET inhibitor tepotinib to determine the recommended phase II dose

Journal

CPT-PHARMACOMETRICS & SYSTEMS PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages 428-440

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/psp4.12602

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Funding

  1. Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany

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Tepotinib is a highly selective and potent MET inhibitor for solid tumors, with dose selection based on translational modeling and efficacy-driven rationale. Preclinical data showed that tumor regression corresponds to 95% target inhibition, suggesting sustained, near-to-complete phospho-MET inhibition as the PD criterion for efficacy. Simulations in human tumors supported an RP2D of tepotinib 500 mg once daily, which has subsequently obtained regulatory approval for treating non-small cell lung cancer with MET exon 14 skipping.
Tepotinib is a highly selective and potent MET inhibitor in development for the treatment of patients with solid tumors. Given the favorable tolerability and safety profiles up to the maximum tested dose in the first-in-human (FIH) trial, an efficacy-driven translational modeling approach was proposed to establish the recommended phase II dose (RP2D). To study the in vivo pharmacokinetics (PKs)/target inhibition/tumor growth inhibition relationship, a subcutaneous KP-4 pancreatic cell-line xenograft model in mice with sensitivity to MET pathway inhibition was selected as a surrogate tumor model. Further clinical PK and target inhibition data (derived from predose and postdose paired tumor biopsies) from a FIH study were integrated with the longitudinal PKs and target inhibition profiles from the mouse xenograft study to establish a translational PK/pharmacodynamic (PD) model. Preclinical data showed that tumor regression with tepotinib treatment in KP-4 xenograft tumors corresponded to 95% target inhibition. We therefore concluded that a PD criterion of sustained, near-to-complete (>95%) phospho-MET inhibition in tumors should be targeted for tepotinib to be effective. Simulations of dose-dependent target inhibition profiles in human tumors that exceeded the PD threshold in more than 90% of patients established an RP2D of tepotinib 500 mg once daily. This translational mathematical modeling approach supports an efficacy-driven rationale for tepotinib phase II dose selection of 500 mg once daily. Tepotinib at this dose has obtained regulatory approval for the treatment of patients with non-small cell lung cancer harboring MET exon 14 skipping.

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