A phase I and pharmacokinetic study of oral dabrafenib in children and adolescent patients with recurrent or refractory BRAF V600 mutation–positive solid tumors Journal Article


Authors: Kieran, M. W.; Geoerger, B.; Dunkel, I. J.; Broniscer, A.; Hargrave, D.; Hingorani, P.; Aerts, I.; Bertozzi, A. I.; Cohen, K. J.; Hummel, T. R.; Shen, V.; Bouffet, E.; Pratilas, C. A.; Pearson, A. D. J.; Tseng, L.; Nebot, N.; Green, S.; Russo, M. W.; Whitlock, J. A.
Article Title: A phase I and pharmacokinetic study of oral dabrafenib in children and adolescent patients with recurrent or refractory BRAF V600 mutation–positive solid tumors
Abstract: Purpose: The 2-part, phase I/IIa, open-label study (NCT01677741) sought to determine the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and preliminary activity of dabrafenib in pediatric patients with advanced BRAF V600–mutated cancers. Patients and Methods: This phase I dose-finding part treated patients ages 1 to <18 years with BRAF V600 mutation–positive tumors with oral dabrafenib 3 to 5.25 mg/kg/day to determine the RP2D based on safety and drug exposure target. Results: Between May 2013 and November 2014, 27 patients [12 male; median age, 9 years (range, 1–17 years)] with BRAF V600–mutant solid tumors recurrent/refractory to treatment (low- or high-grade glioma, Langerhans cell histiocytosis, neuroblastoma, or thyroid cancer) were enrolled. The median treatment duration was 75.6 weeks (range, 5.6–148.7 weeks), with 63% treated for >52 weeks and 52% undergoing treatment at data cutoff date. The most common grade 3/4 adverse events suspected to be related to study drug were maculopapular rash and arthralgia (2 patients each). No dose-limiting toxicities were observed. Pharmacokinetic analyses showed a dose-dependent increase in AUC0–12 and achievement of adult exposure levels at the recommended phase II doses of 5.25 mg/kg/day (age <12 years) and 4.5 mg/kg/day (age ≥12 years) divided into 2 equal doses daily, not exceeding 300 mg daily. Conclusions: In this first clinical trial in pediatric patients with pretreated BRAF V600–mutant tumors, dabrafenib was well tolerated while achieving target exposure levels; the average treatment duration was >1 year with many patients still on treatment. The phase II component is also closed and will be reported separately. © 2019 American Association for Cancer Research.
Journal Title: Clinical Cancer Research
Volume: 25
Issue: 24
ISSN: 1078-0432
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2019-12-15
Start Page: 7294
End Page: 7302
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.Ccr-17-3572
PUBMED: 31506385
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Source: Scopus
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  1. Ira J Dunkel
    371 Dunkel