Safety and antitumor activity of metformin plus lanreotide in patients with advanced gastro-intestinal or lung neuroendocrine tumors: the phase Ib trial MetNET2
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Published:2023-12-14
Issue:1
Volume:16
Page:
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ISSN:1756-8722
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Container-title:Journal of Hematology & Oncology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J Hematol Oncol
Author:
Pusceddu Sara,Corti Francesca,Prinzi Natalie,Nichetti Federico,Ljevar Silva,Busico Adele,Cascella Tommaso,Leporati Rita,Oldani Simone,Pircher Chiara Carlotta,Coppa Jorgelina,Resi Veronica,Milione Massimo,Maccauro Marco,Miceli Rosalba,Tamborini Elena,Perrone Federica,Spreafico Carlo,Niger Monica,Morano Federica,Pietrantonio Filippo,Seregni Ettore,Mariani Luigi,Mazzaferro Vincenzo,Di Liberti Giorgia,Fucà Giovanni,de Braud Filippo,Vernieri Claudio
Abstract
AbstractIn retrospective studies, metformin use has been associated with better clinical outcomes in diabetic patients with advanced, well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumors (WDNETs). However, prospective evidence of metformin safety and activity is lacking. Here, we conducted the first-in-human phase Ib MetNET2 trial to investigate the safety and antitumor activity of metformin in combination with the somatostatin analog lanreotide autogel (ATG) in both diabetic and non-diabetic patients with advanced WDNETs of the gastrointestinal (GI) or thoracic tract. Enrolled patients received lanreotide ATG 120 mg plus oral metformin, up to a maximum dosage of 2550 mg/day. We enrolled 20 patients, of whom 18 (90%) and 2 (10%) had WDNETs of the GI and thoracic tract, respectively. Fourteen patients (70%) were non-diabetic. With a 5% incidence of SAEs, the study met its primary objective of demonstrating treatment safety. With a median follow-up of 39 months (95% CI 28-NE), median PFS was 24 months (95% CI 16-NE), with 12-month and 24-month PFS probability of 75% (95% CI 58–97) and 49% (95% CI 31–77), respectively. We found no statistically significant PFS differences between diabetic and non-diabetic patients. Among exploratory analyses, the presence of tumor genomic alterations in DNA damage pathways was associated with trend towards worse PFS, whereas a precocious reduction of HOMA-IR index and plasma cholesterol concentration showed a trend towards an association with better PFS. In conclusion, metformin plus lanreotide ATG is a safe and well tolerated combination treatment that is associated with promising antitumor activity in both non-diabetic and diabetic patients with WDNETs, and that warrants further investigation in larger clinical trials.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology,Molecular Biology,Hematology
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