42
Clinical Updates Novel Agents for the Treatment of Metastatic Melanoma Future Directions: Opportunities for Targeting B-RAF and Other Targets in Melanoma Management Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA

Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

  • Upload
    jeroen

  • View
    29

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Clinical Updates Novel Agents for the Treatment of Metastatic Melanoma Future Directions: Opportunities for Targeting B-RAF and Other Targets in Melanoma Management. Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Clinical Updates Novel Agents for the Treatment of Metastatic Melanoma

Future Directions: Opportunities for Targeting B-RAF and Other Targets in

Melanoma Management

Keith T. Flaherty, MDAssistant Professor of MedicineAbramson Cancer Center of the

University of PennsylvaniaPhiladelphia, PA

Page 2: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Novel Cytotoxics

Page 3: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Albumin-bound paclitaxel

• Established superiority to conventional paclitaxel in metastatic breast cancer

• Phase II trial in metastatic melanoma

• 35 patients with chemotherapy-naïve metastatic melanoma received ABI-007 100 mg/m2 IV weekly for 3 out of 4 weeks

• Objective response rate 26%

• Median PFS 4 months

• Phase III trial being conducted compared to dacarbazine

Page 4: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Altering the Threshold for Chemotherapy-induced Apoptosis

Page 5: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

STA-4783 Induces Programmed Cell Death via

the Intrinsic Mitochondrial Apoptotic Pathway

STA-4783

TARGET

↑ ROSMitochondria

Cytochrome c release

APOPTOSISCaspase 9activation

STA-4783 induces ROS which accumulate in the mitochondria

Cytochrome c activates caspase 9 which then activates caspase 3/7 leading to apoptosis

ROS elevation leads to the oxidation of cardiolipin, a mitochondrial phospholipid which holds cytochrome c in the mitochondria. Oxidation of cardiolipin leads to the release of cytochrome c

Cytochrome c exits the mitochondria through pores which are created by pro-apoptotic members of the Bcl2 family and are dependent upon elevated ROS

Page 6: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

STA-4783 in Metastatic MelanomaStudy Design

Coordinating investigator: Steven O’Day, MD, The Angeles Clinic and Research Institute

(81 patients were enrolled from December 2004 to September 2005)

• Double-blind, randomized, controlled; 21 centers in United States

• Treatment: 3 weekly treatments per each 4-week cycle, until PD

• Assessment: at baseline and every other cycle thereafter (RECIST)

• Cross-over for paclitaxel-alone arm after PD

Paclitaxel: 80 mg/m2

+STA-4783 213 mg/m2

(N=53)

Study Population

Stage IV 0-1 prior

Chemo for Metastatic disease

ECOG 0-2 No brain mets

Paclitaxel: 80 mg/m2

(N=28)

Randomization2:1

(N=81)

Primary Endpoint

Progression-freeSurvival

1/week for 3 weeks; 1 week off

Page 7: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Kaplan-Meier Plot of Progression-free Survival

Hazard Ratio= .583

P= 0.035*

* The P-value is from a 2-sided log-rank test.

6 Month PFS

STA-4783 + Paclitaxel

35%

Paclitaxel 15%

Page 8: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Genasense Drug Substance (Oblimersen Sodium, G3139)

• 18-base DNA oligonucleotide

• TCTCCCAGCGTGCGCCAT

• Phosphorothioate backbone

• Selectively targets Bcl-2 RNA

• Decreases Bcl-2 protein

• Other MOAs possible

O BaseO

BaseO

BaseO

OP

S O

-O

OP

-O O

S

OP

S O

-O

Page 9: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

GM301 Study Design

• Primary endpoint: overall survival

• Secondary endpoints: response rate, progression free survival

• Sample size: N = 771

• Cycles every 21 days (maximum of 8): no cross-over

• Radiologic assessment every 2 cycles

• Minimum follow-up: 2 years

DTIC 1000 mg/m²

G3139 7 mg/kg/d x 5 days DTIC 1000 mg/m²

Stratification/

Randomization

Page 10: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

1.0

0.4

0.2

0.0

0 20 24

0.8

0.6

4 8 12 16

Months

Pro

po

rtio

n S

urv

ivin

g

G+DTIC DTIC

Median (mos) 9.0 7.8

Hazard Ratio 0.87

Logrank p 0.077

Overall Survival (24-Month)Intent-to-treat Population; N=771

Page 11: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

0 2 6 10 14 18 20 244 8 12 16 22

1.0

0.4

0.2

0.0

0.8

0.6

Months

Pro

port

ion

Su

rviv

ing

G+DTIC DTIC

Median (mos) 12.3 9.9

Hazard Ratio 0.64

Logrank P 0.0009

Overall SurvivalBaseline LDH < 0.8 x ULN; N=274

Page 12: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

AGENDA (GM307) Study Design

• Co-Primary Endpoints: PFS/Overall survival

• Secondary endpoints: overall response rate, durable response rate, duration of response

• Sample size: N = 300

• Cycles every 21 days (maximum of 8): no cross-over

• Radiologic assessment every 42 days

• Minimum follow-up: 2 years

Genasense 7 mg/kg/d CIV x 5 days DTIC 1000 mg/m²

Stratification/

RandomizationMatching PCBO CIV x 5 days DTIC 1000 mg/m²

Page 13: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Signal Transduction & Angiogenesis Inhibitors

Page 14: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Mutated in 60-70% of melanoma 90% of mutations are V600E

Davies et al. Nature 2002; 417:949-54 & Wan PT et al. Cell. 2004 19;116(6):855-67

B-RAF, An Oncogene in 7% of Human Cancers

Page 15: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Response Rates & B-RAF Mutation Status

combination chemotherapy response rate

Wild type B-RAF 33%

Mutant B-RAF 11%

Chang et al. J Transl Med. 2004 Dec 21;2(1):46.

Page 16: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

NRASB-RAF

MEK

ERK

MAP kinase pathway inhibitors in melanoma

PD0325901 ARRY-142886

BAY 43-9006/sorafenib

CHR-265

PLX4032

SB-590885

Page 17: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Sorafenib

Kinase assays IC50

C-Raf 2 nM

mVEGFR2, VEGFR3 6-10 nM

wt B-Raf, V599E B-Raf 20–40 nM

p38, PDGFrβ 28–38 nM

FLT-3, c-KIT 40–80 nM

EGFR, PKC, MEK, ERK Inactive at 10 mM

Wilhelm S et al. Cancer Res. 2004;64:7099-109

NH

NH

OO

N

NH

OCF3

Cl

Page 18: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Sorafenib Spectrum vs. Whole Kinome

Fabian, M.A. et al. Nat Biotechnol, 2005. 23(3):329-36.

Page 19: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Single-agent Sorafenib in Melanoma

• 39 patients with metastatic melanoma

– 1 responder

– 7 patients with stable disease at 12 weeks

• 22 patients with metastatic melanoma

– 1 partial response

– 12 with stable disease

Median progression-free survival: 3 months

Page 20: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Sorafenib with Chemotherapy

Single arm phase II trials

N ORR PFS

Dacarbazine 30 17% 3.6 mo.

Temozolomide 76 24% 6.0 mo.

Carboplatin & paclitaxel 105 26% 8.8 mo.

Page 21: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

1ST 2ND

DTIC/temozolomide randomized phase II

Carboplatin/paclitaxel E2603 phase III OS PFS

Line of therapyChemotherapy

backbone

Randomized Trials in Metastatic Melanoma

Page 22: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Eligibility criteria• No prior chemotherapy,

one prior immunotherapy allowed

• Measurable disease by RECIST

• No active brain metastases, screening brain MRI required

Stratified: AJCC stage• Unresectable stage III• Stage IV-M1a, M1b• Stage IV-M1cECOG PS• 0• 1

Group A: DTIC, 1000 mg/m2 IV q3wSorafenib 400 mg po bid

Group B: DTIC, 1000 mg/m2 IV q3wPlacebo 2 tablets po bid

Sorafenib in Melanoma: Randomized Phase II Sorafenib + DTIC Trial Design

Ran

do

miz

atio

n

(N=

98)

• 1° end point: PFS

• 2° end point: OS

• 3° end points: TTP, tumor response rate, duration of response, EQ-5D QoL

Data on file. Bayer HealthCare.

Page 23: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Phase II Dacarbazine ± Sorafenib

1.00

0.75

0.50

0.25

0.000 100 200 300 400 500

Days From Randomization

Pro

gres

sion

-Fre

e S

urvi

val P

roba

bilit

y

600

Hazard Ratio = 0.67; P = 0.068

Sorafenib + DTIC (39 events)Median: 2.7 mo.

Placebo + DTIC (42 events) Median: 4.9 mo.

ORR

24%

12%

Page 24: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Sorafenib in Melanoma: PRISMPhase III Paclitaxel + Carboplatin ± Sorafenib

Agarwala SS, et al. Proc Am Soc Clin Oncol. 2007;25:474s. Abstract 8510.

N=270

Primary endpoint: progression-free survival (by independent assessment)

Secondary and tertiary endpoints: time to progression, objective response rate, duration of response, overall survival

Carboplatin AUC 6 IV Day 1Paclitaxel 225 mg/m2 IV Day 1

Sorafenib 400 mg po bid Days 2-19Cycles repeated every 21 days

Stratified by:

AJCC stage: Unresectable stage III Stage IV – M1a, M1b Stage IV – M1c

ECOG PS: 0 vs 1

Key Eligibility: Progresses on DTIC/TMZ No active brain Metastases Measurable disease by RECIST Carboplatin AUC 6 IV Day 1

Paclitaxel 225 mg/m2 IV Day 1Placebo 2 tablets po bid Days 2-19

Cycles repeated every 21 days

RRAANNDDOOMMIIZZAATTIIOONN

Mandatory dose reduction after cycle 4 to paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 and

carboplatin AUC 5

Page 25: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Phase III Carboplatin/Paclitaxel ± Sorafenib

Hazard Ratio = 0.91; P = 0.492

Sorafenib + C/P (97 events)

Median: 4.0 mo.

Placebo + C/P (100 events)

Median: 4.1 mo.

1.00

0.75

0.50

0.25

0.00

Pro

babi

lity

of P

rogr

essi

on-F

ree

Sur

viva

l

0 14 29 43 57 71

Weeks From Randomization

ORR

11%

10%

Agarwala SS, et al. Proc Am Soc Clin Oncol. 2007;25:474s. Abstract 8510.

Page 26: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Paclitaxel/Carboplatin ± Sorafenib in Advanced Melanoma E2603 Phase III Trial

Arm ACarboplatin AUC 6 IV Day 1Paclitaxel 225 mg/m2 IV Day 1Placebo 2 tablets po bid Days 2-19 Q3WStratified by:

AJCC Stage ECOG PS Prior Therapy

Arm BCarboplatin AUC 6 IV Day 1Paclitaxel 225 mg/m2 IV Day 1Sorafenib 400 mg po bid Days 2-19 Q3W

RRAANNDDOOMMIIZZEE

Carboplatin and paclitaxel with or without sorafenib in treating patients with unresectable stage III or stage IV melanoma.

Available at: www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct/show/NCT0010019?order=1. Accessed September 17, 2007.

800 patients with metastatic melanoma and no prior chemotherapy; primary endpoint - OS

Page 27: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

BIM

p27Kip

-actin

pMEK

MEK

RAF265 Sorafenib

Vehicle

10 mg/kg q2d RAF26530 mg/kg q2d RAF265 100 mg/kg q2d RAF265

Mea

n T

um

or

Vo

lum

e (m

m3)(

+/-

SE

)

0

400

800

1200

1600

2000

2400

0 4 8 12 16 20

Days Post Staging

MEXF 276 (B-RafV600E)

RAF265 Causes Tumor Regression in Xenografts of V600E B-RAF Human Melanoma

Tumor Regressions (N=8/group)

PR / CR

1 / 08 / 08 / 0

100 mg/kg qd Sorafenib

0 / 0

0 / 0

Courtesy of Darrin Stuart, Novartis

-

Vehicle

-

Vehicle

-

Vehicle 10 mg/kg 30 mg/kg 100 mg/kg

Vehicle 10 mg/kg 30 mg/kg 100 mg/kg

-

Vehicle 10 mg/kg 30 mg/kg 100 mg/kg

Vehicle 10 mg/kg 30 mg/kg 100 mg/kg

Page 28: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

RAF-265-MEL01 Study Design

40-60 B-RAFWT

40-60 B-RAFMUT

• Dose escalate to MTD without regard to B-RAF status using Bayesian methodology

• Assess Safety, PK, PD

• Expand at MTD and stratify based on B-RAF mutation status

• Assess PFS, ORR

Phase I

MTD

Serial biopsies once target drug exposure achieved

Phase II expansion

Page 29: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Selectivity of PLX4032 in vivo

N-RasMUT B-RafMUT

Lee J et al. 2006 NCI/AACR/EORTC

Page 30: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

PLX4032 Dose Escalation Study

Dose level 1

Dose level 2

Dose level 3

Dose level 4

Maximum tolerated dose

3-6pts

3-6pts

3-6pts

3-6pts

3-6pts

Target AUC 6 patients with V600E+ melanoma

Serial biopsies

6 patients with V600E+ melanoma

Page 31: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

AZD6244 Suppresses the Growth of 1205Lu Melanoma Xenograft (B-RAF mutant)

K Smalley et al, NCI/AACR/EORTC 2006

Page 32: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Lorusso et al. ASCO 2005, abstract 3011

Tumor pERK Suppression in Individual Patients MEK Inhibitor (PD0325901)

Page 33: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Phase II Trials with MEK Inhibitors

• ARRY-142886/AZ6244 (AstraZeneca)

– Randomized phase II: ARRY-142886 vs. temozolomide

– N = 182

– Archival, paraffin-embedded tissue collection

– Sample size allows allows exploration of effect in patients with a B-RAF or N-RAS mutation

• PD0325901 (Pfizer)

– Single-arm phase II

Page 34: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Single-agent Bevacizumab or Bevacizumab/IFN in Melanoma

• Randomized phase II trial:

– bevacizumab 15 mg/kg IV every 2 weeks vs.

– bevacizumab 15 mg/kg IV every 2 weeks + 1 MIU IFNα SQ QD

• 17 patients accrued as of preliminary analysis

– 44% with lymph node/skin metastases (M1a)

• 1 CR, 1 PR both on combination arm, both with M1a disease

• 4 SD > 24 weeks (3 on bevacizumab alone)

• Not published

Carson W et al. ASCO 2003, abstract 2873

Page 35: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Randomized Phase II Trial of Carboplatin/Paclitaxel ± Bevacizumab

RRAANNDDOOM M IIZZEE

Arm A

Carboplatin AUC 5 IV q 21dPaclitaxel 175 mg/m2 IV q21d Placebo

Arm B

Carboplatin AUC 5 IV q21dPaclitaxel 175 mg/m2 IV q21dBevacizumab 15 mg/kg IV q 21d

Stratify:

AJCC stage

ECOG PS

N = 200 patients with previously untreated metastatic melanoma

Primary endpoint = progression-free survival

Page 36: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Current Phase I or II Melanoma Trials with Angiogenesis Inhibitors

• AG-013736 (VEGFR & PDGFR)

– Single arm phase II

• CHR-258 (VEGFR & FGFR)

– Phase I in melanoma

• Sunitinib

– Phase I with temozolomide in melanoma

• Sorafenib/bevacizumab

• Sorafenib/temsirolimus

• Bevacizumab/temsirolimus

NCI/CTEP sponsored phase II

Page 37: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Novel Immunologics

Page 38: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Dendritic Cell/T Cell Activating Therapies in Clinical Development

Dendritic cell T cell

+T cell

receptorMHC

CD28

B7-1 (CD80)

CTLA4

B7-2 (CD86)

-

PD-L1 (B7-H1)

PD-1

-

Page 39: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Dendritic Cell/T Cell Activating Therapies in Clinical Development

Dendritic cell T cell

OX40L OX40

4-1BBL 4-1BB (CD137)

CD40LCD40

+

+

CD70 CD27

+

+T cell

receptorMHC

CD28B7

+

Page 40: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Hamid. ASCO. 2007 (abstr 8525).

46 responding patients out of 356 patientsenrolled in 6 clinical trials

*Indicates patient with ongoing response, N=25.

Duration of OR (months)

Nu

mb

er o

f P

atie

nts

Response Duration with Ipilimumab

Page 41: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Phase I Trial of CP-870,893• 29 patients with advanced solid tumors; 15 with melanoma

evaluated by RECIST

– 4 Partial Responses

– 7 Stable Disease

• All partial responses were in patients with melanoma

– Regression of lesions in liver, skin, lymph nodes, lung, muscle

– All PRs at 0.2 mg/kg or 0.3 mg/kg

• One melanoma patient (0.2 mg/kg) had a near CR for 18 months, then isolated LN recurrence, underwent surgery, now CR for 18 additional months

UPIN 1017 (melanoma)

Page 42: Keith T. Flaherty, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine Abramson Cancer Center of the

Future Directions in Melanoma

• Diverse mechanisms currently being explored in melanoma

– Novel cytotoxics, signal transduction inhibitors, anti-angiogenic & novel immunotherapies

• Critical for new therapies to establish which subpopulation derives the greatest benefit