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A phase 1 study of efatutazone,an oral peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor gamma agonist,administered to patients with advanced malignancies
Authors:Michael J. Pishvaian MD  PhD  John L. Marshall MD  Andrew J. Wagner MD  PhD  Jimmy J. Hwang MD  Shakun Malik MD  Ion Cotarla MD  PhD  John F. Deeken MD  A. Ruth He MD  PhD  Hirut Daniel BS  Abdel‐Baset Halim PharmD  PhD  Hamim Zahir PhD  Catherine Copigneaux PharmD  Kejian Liu PhD  Robert A. Beckman MD  George D. Demetri MD
Affiliation:1. Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, Developmental Therapeutics Program, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, District of ColumbiaFax: (202)‐444‐9429;2. Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, Developmental Therapeutics Program, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, District of Columbia;3. Ludwig Center at Dana‐Farber/Harvard Cancer Center, Boston, Massachusetts;4. Translational Medicine and Clinical Pharmacology, Daiichi Sankyo Pharmaceutical Development, Edison, New Jersey;5. Oncology Clinical Research and Development, Daiichi Sankyo Pharmaceutical Development, Edison, New Jersey;6. Biostatistics, Daiichi Sankyo Pharmaceutical Development, Edison, New Jersey
Abstract:

BACKGROUND:

Efatutazone (CS‐7017), a novel peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor gamma (PPARγ) agonist, exerts anticancer activity in preclinical models. The authors conducted a phase 1 study to determine the recommended phase 2 dose, safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of efatutazone.

METHODS:

Patients with advanced solid malignancies and no curative therapeutic options were enrolled to receive a given dose of efatutazone, administered orally (PO) twice daily for 6 weeks, in a 3 + 3 intercohort dose‐escalation trial. After the third patient, patients with diabetes mellitus were excluded. Efatutazone dosing continued until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity, with measurement of efatutazone pharmacokinetics and plasma adiponectin levels.

RESULTS:

Thirty‐one patients received efatutazone at doses ranging from 0.10 to 1.15 mg PO twice daily. Dose escalation stopped when maximal impact on PPARγ‐related biomarkers had been reached before any protocol‐defined maximum‐tolerated dose level. On the basis of a population pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic analysis, the recommended phase 2 dose was 0.5 mg PO twice daily. A majority of patients experienced peripheral edema (53.3%), often requiring diuretics. Three episodes of dose‐limiting toxicities, related to fluid retention, were noted in the 0.10‐, 0.25‐, and 1.15‐mg cohorts. Of 31 treated patients, 27 were evaluable for response. A sustained partial response (PR; 690 days on therapy) was observed in a patient with myxoid liposarcoma. Ten additional patients had stable disease (SD) for ≥60 days. Exposures were approximately dose proportional, and adiponectin levels increased after 4 weeks of treatment at all dose levels. Immunohistochemistry of archived specimens demonstrated that PPARγ and retinoid X receptor expression levels were significantly greater in patients with SD for ≥60 days or PR (P = .0079), suggesting a predictive biomarker.

CONCLUSIONS:

Efatutazone demonstrates acceptable tolerability with evidence of disease control in patients with advanced malignancies. Cancer 2012. © 2012 American Cancer Society.
Keywords:efatutazone  CS‐7017  PPARγ    phase 1  retinoid  biomarker
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