학술논문

A WIN Consortium phase I study exploring avelumab, palbociclib, and axitinib in advanced non‐small cell lung cancer
Document Type
article
Source
Cancer Medicine. 11(14)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Clinical Research
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Lung Cancer
Cancer
Lung
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
6.1 Pharmaceuticals
Good Health and Well Being
Antibodies
Monoclonal
Antibodies
Monoclonal
Humanized
Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols
Axitinib
B7-H1 Antigen
Carcinoma
Non-Small-Cell Lung
Humans
Lung Neoplasms
Piperazines
Protein-Tyrosine Kinases
Proto-Oncogene Proteins
Pyridines
anti-PD-L1
CDK4
6
genomics
NSCLC
phase I
transcriptomics
VEGFR
NSCLC
VEGFR
CDK4/6
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Oncology and carcinogenesis
Language
Abstract
BackgroundThe Worldwide Innovative Network (WIN) Consortium has developed the Simplified Interventional Mapping System (SIMS) to better define the cancer molecular milieu based on genomics/transcriptomics from tumor and analogous normal tissue biopsies. SPRING is the first trial to assess a SIMS-based tri-therapy regimen in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).MethodsPatients with advanced NSCLC (no EGFR, ALK, or ROS1 alterations; PD-L1 unrestricted; ≤2 prior therapy lines) received avelumab, axitinib, and palbociclib (3 + 3 dose escalation design).ResultsFifteen patients were treated (five centers, four countries): six at each of dose levels 1 (DL1) and DL2; three at DL3. The most common ≥Grade 3 adverse events were neutropenia, hypertension, and fatigue. The recommended Phase II dose (RP2D) was DL1: avelumab 10 mg/kg IV q2weeks, axitinib 3 mg po bid, and palbociclib 75 mg po daily (7 days off/21 days on). Four patients (27%) achieved a partial response (PR) (progression-free survival [PFS]: 14, 24, 25 and 144+ weeks), including two after progression on pembrolizumab. Four patients attained stable disease (SD) that lasted ≥24 weeks: 24, 27, 29, and 64 weeks. At DL1 (RP2D), four of six patients (66%) achieved stable disease (SD) ≥6 months/PR (2 each). Responders included patients with no detectable PD-L1 expression and low tumor mutational burden.ConclusionsOverall, eight of 15 patients (53%) achieved clinical benefit (SD ≥ 24 weeks/PR) on the avelumab, axitinib, and palbociclib combination. This triplet showed antitumor activity in NSCLC, including in tumors post-pembrolizumab progression, and was active at the RP2D, which was well tolerated. NCT03386929 clinicaltrial.gov.