Phase Ib dose-escalation study of the hypoxia-modifier Myo-inositol trispyrophosphate in patients with hepatopancreatobiliary tumors

Author:

Schneider Marcel A.ORCID,Linecker Michael,Fritsch Ralph,Muehlematter Urs J.ORCID,Stocker Daniel,Pestalozzi Bernhard,Samaras Panagiotis,Jetter AlexanderORCID,Kron Philipp,Petrowsky Henrik,Nicolau Claude,Lehn Jean-Marie,Humar Bostjan,Graf RolfORCID,Clavien Pierre-Alain,Limani PerparimORCID

Abstract

AbstractHypoxia is prominent in solid tumors and a recognized driver of malignancy. Thus far, targeting tumor hypoxia has remained unsuccessful. Myo-inositol trispyrophosphate (ITPP) is a re-oxygenating compound without apparent toxicity. In preclinical models, ITPP potentiates the efficacy of subsequent chemotherapy through vascular normalization. Here, we report the results of an unrandomized, open-labeled, 3 + 3 dose-escalation phase Ib study (NCT02528526) including 28 patients with advanced primary hepatopancreatobiliary malignancies and liver metastases of colorectal cancer receiving nine 8h-infusions of ITPP over three weeks across eight dose levels (1'866-14'500 mg/m2/dose), followed by standard chemotherapy. Primary objectives are assessment of the safety and tolerability and establishment of the maximum tolerated dose, while secondary objectives include assessment of pharmacokinetics, antitumor activity via radiological evaluation and assessment of circulatory tumor-specific and angiogenic markers. The maximum tolerated dose is 12,390 mg/m2, and ITPP treatment results in 32 treatment-related toxicities (mostly hypercalcemia) that require little or no intervention. 52% of patients have morphological disease stabilization under ITPP monotherapy. Following subsequent chemotherapy, 10% show partial responses while 60% have stable disease. Decreases in angiogenic markers are noted in ∼60% of patients after ITPP and tend to correlate with responses and survival after chemotherapy.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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