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Botensilimab plus balstilimab in relapsed/refractory microsatellite stable metastatic colorectal cancer: a phase 1 trial

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posted on 2024-06-24, 10:01 authored by Andrea J Bullock, Benjamin L Schlechter, Marwan G Fakih, Apostolia M Tsimberidou, Joseph E Grossman, Michael S Gordon, Breelyn A Wilky, Agustin Pimentel, Daruka Mahadevan, Ani S Balmanoukian, Rachel E Sanborn, Gary K Schwartz, Ghassan K Abou-Alfa, Neil H Segal, Bruno Bockorny, Justin C Moser, Sunil Sharma, Jaymin M Patel, Wei Wu, Dhan Chand, Katherine Rosenthal, Gabriel Mednick, Chloe Delepine, Tyler J Curiel, Justin Stebbing, Heinz-Josef Lenz, Steven J O’Day, Anthony B El-Khoueiry

Microsatellite stable metastatic colorectal cancer (MSS mCRC; mismatch repair proficient) has previously responded poorly to immune checkpoint blockade. Botensilimab (BOT) is an Fc-enhanced multifunctional anti-cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) antibody designed to expand therapy to cold/poorly immunogenic solid tumors, such as MSS mCRC. BOT with or without balstilimab (BAL; anti-PD-1 antibody) is being evaluated in an ongoing expanded phase 1 study. The primary endpoint is safety and tolerability, which was evaluated separately in the dose-escalation portion of the study and in patients with MSS mCRC (using combined dose-escalation/dose-expansion data). Secondary endpoints include investigator-assessed RECIST version 1.1–confirmed objective response rate (ORR), disease control rate (DCR), duration of response (DOR) and progression-free survival (PFS). Here we present outcomes in 148 heavily pre-treated patients with MSS mCRC (six from the dose-escalation cohort; 142 from the dose-expansion cohort) treated with BOT and BAL, 101 of whom were considered response evaluable with at least 6 months of follow-up. Treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) occurred in 89% of patients with MSS mCRC (131/148), most commonly fatigue (35%, 52/148), diarrhea (32%, 47/148) and pyrexia (24%, 36/148), with no grade 5 TRAEs reported and a 12% discontinuation rate due to a TRAE (18/148; data fully mature). In the response-evaluable population (n = 101), ORR was 17% (17/101; 95% confidence interval (CI), 10–26%), and DCR was 61% (62/101; 95% CI, 51–71%). Median DOR was not reached (NR; 95% CI, 5.7 months–NR), and median PFS was 3.5 months (95% CI, 2.7–4.1 months), at a median follow-up of 10.3 months (range, 0.5–42.6 months; data continuing to mature). The combination of BOT plus BAL demonstrated a manageable safety profile with no new immune-mediated safety signals and encouraging clinical activity with durable responses. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03860272.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Number of pages

24

Publication title

Nature Medicine

ISSN

1078-8956

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Location

United States

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Item sub-type

Journal Article

Media of output

Print-Electronic

Affiliated with

  • School of Life Sciences Outputs