TY - JOUR
T1 - Phase I, dose-escalation, two-part trial of the PARP inhibitor talazoparib in patients with advanced germline BRCA1/2 mutations and selected sporadic cancers
AU - de Bono, Johann
AU - Ramanathan, Ramesh K.
AU - Mina, Lida
AU - Chugh, Rashmi
AU - Glaspy, John
AU - Rafii, Saeed
AU - Kaye, Stan
AU - Sachdev, Jasgit
AU - Heymach, John
AU - Smith, David C.
AU - Henshaw, Joshua W.
AU - Herriott, Ashleigh
AU - Patterson, Miranda
AU - Curtin, Nicola J.
AU - Byers, Lauren Averett
AU - Wainberg, Zev A.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank the study patients and the following persons from the sponsors for their contributions to data collection and analysis, assistance with statistical analysis, or critical review of the manuscript. From BioMarin: Andrew Dorr, MD, Gilles Gallant, PhD, Don Musson, PhD, Charles O’Neill, PhD, Evelyn W. Wang, PhD, Charlie Zhang, PhD, and Huiyu Zhou, PhD; from Medivation (acquired by Pfizer, Inc., in September 2016): Alison L. Hannah, MD. Copyediting and formatting support funded by Medivation (acquired by Pfizer, Inc., in September 2016) was provided by Edwin Thrower, PhD, and Shannon Davis of Ashfield Healthcare Communications. Medivation, Inc., has assumed responsibility for talazoparib effective October 6, 2015, and was involved in the trial, data analysis, and interpretation; Medivation was acquired by Pfizer, Inc., in September 2016. BioMarin Pharmaceutical, Inc., was involved in the study design, data collection, analysis, and interpretation. All authors had full access to all data in the study and had final responsibility for the decision to submit for publication. J. de Bono acknowledges support from The Institute of Cancer Research/Royal Marsden Drug Development Unit through a Cancer Research UK Centre grant, an Experimental Cancer Medical Centre (ECMC) grant from Cancer Research UK and the Department of Health (Ref: C51/A7401), and NHS funding to the NIHR Biomedical Research Centre to the Royal Marsden.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 AACR.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Talazoparib inhibits PARP catalytic activity, trapping PARP1 on damaged DNA and causing cell death in BRCA1/2-mutated cells. We evaluated talazoparib therapy in this two-part, phase I, first-in-human trial. Antitumor activity, MTD, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of once-daily talazoparib were determined in an open-label, multicenter, dose-escalation study (NCT01286987). The MTD was 1.0 mg/day, with an elimination half-life of 50 hours. Treatmentrelated adverse events included fatigue (26/71 patients; 37%) and anemia (25/71 patients; 35%). Grade 3 to 4 adverse events included anemia (17/71 patients; 24%) and thrombocytopenia (13/71 patients; 18%). Sustained PARP inhibition was observed at doses ≥0.60 mg/day. At 1.0 mg/day, confirmed responses were observed in 7 of 14 (50%) and 5 of 12 (42%) patients with BRCA mutation- associated breast and ovarian cancers, respectively, and in patients with pancreatic and small cell lung cancer. Talazoparib demonstrated single-agent antitumor activity and was well tolerated in patients at the recommended dose of 1.0 mg/day. SIGNIFICANCE: In this clinical trial, we show that talazoparib has single-agent antitumor activity and a tolerable safety profile. At its recommended phase II dose of 1.0 mg/day, confirmed responses were observed in patients with BRCA mutation-associated breast and ovarian cancers and in patients with pancreatic and small cell lung cancer.
AB - Talazoparib inhibits PARP catalytic activity, trapping PARP1 on damaged DNA and causing cell death in BRCA1/2-mutated cells. We evaluated talazoparib therapy in this two-part, phase I, first-in-human trial. Antitumor activity, MTD, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of once-daily talazoparib were determined in an open-label, multicenter, dose-escalation study (NCT01286987). The MTD was 1.0 mg/day, with an elimination half-life of 50 hours. Treatmentrelated adverse events included fatigue (26/71 patients; 37%) and anemia (25/71 patients; 35%). Grade 3 to 4 adverse events included anemia (17/71 patients; 24%) and thrombocytopenia (13/71 patients; 18%). Sustained PARP inhibition was observed at doses ≥0.60 mg/day. At 1.0 mg/day, confirmed responses were observed in 7 of 14 (50%) and 5 of 12 (42%) patients with BRCA mutation- associated breast and ovarian cancers, respectively, and in patients with pancreatic and small cell lung cancer. Talazoparib demonstrated single-agent antitumor activity and was well tolerated in patients at the recommended dose of 1.0 mg/day. SIGNIFICANCE: In this clinical trial, we show that talazoparib has single-agent antitumor activity and a tolerable safety profile. At its recommended phase II dose of 1.0 mg/day, confirmed responses were observed in patients with BRCA mutation-associated breast and ovarian cancers and in patients with pancreatic and small cell lung cancer.
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U2 - 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-16-1250
DO - 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-16-1250
M3 - Article
C2 - 28242752
AN - SCOPUS:85020427570
SN - 2159-8274
VL - 7
SP - 620
EP - 629
JO - Cancer discovery
JF - Cancer discovery
IS - 6
ER -