Phase I first-in-human dose escalation study of the oral SF3B1 modulator H3B-8800 in myeloid neoplasms Journal Article


Authors: Steensma, D. P.; Wermke, M.; Klimek, V. M.; Greenberg, P. L.; Font, P.; Komrokji, R. S.; Yang, J.; Brunner, A. M.; Carraway, H. E.; Ades, L.; Al-Kali, A.; Alonso-Dominguez, J. M.; Alfonso-Piérola, A.; Coombs, C. C.; Deeg, H. J.; Flinn, I.; Foran, J. M.; Garcia-Manero, G.; Maris, M. B.; McMasters, M.; Micol, J. B.; Perez De Oteyza, J.; Thol, F.; Wang, E. S.; Watts, J. M.; Taylor, J.; Stone, R.; Gourineni, V.; Marino, A. J.; Yao, H.; Destenaves, B.; Yuan, X.; Yu, K.; Dar, S.; Ohanjanian, L.; Kuida, K.; Xiao, J.; Scholz, C.; Gualberto, A.; Platzbecker, U.
Article Title: Phase I first-in-human dose escalation study of the oral SF3B1 modulator H3B-8800 in myeloid neoplasms
Abstract: We conducted a phase I clinical trial of H3B-8800, an oral small molecule that binds Splicing Factor 3B1 (SF3B1), in patients with MDS, CMML, or AML. Among 84 enrolled patients (42 MDS, 4 CMML and 38 AML), 62 were red blood cell (RBC) transfusion dependent at study entry. Dose escalation cohorts examined two once-daily dosing regimens: schedule I (5 days on/9 days off, range of doses studied 1–40 mg, n = 65) and schedule II (21 days on/7 days off, 7–20 mg, n = 19); 27 patients received treatment for ≥180 days. The most common treatment-related, treatment-emergent adverse events included diarrhea, nausea, fatigue, and vomiting. No complete or partial responses meeting IWG criteria were observed; however, RBC transfusion free intervals >56 days were observed in nine patients who were transfusion dependent at study entry (15%). Of 15 MDS patients with missense SF3B1 mutations, five experienced RBC transfusion independence (TI). Elevated pre-treatment expression of aberrant transcripts of Transmembrane Protein 14C (TMEM14C), an SF3B1 splicing target encoding a mitochondrial porphyrin transporter, was observed in MDS patients experiencing RBC TI. In summary, H3B-8800 treatment was associated with mostly low-grade TAEs and induced RBC TI in a biomarker-defined subset of MDS. © 2021, The Author(s).
Journal Title: Leukemia
Volume: 35
Issue: 12
ISSN: 0887-6924
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2021-12-01
Start Page: 3542
End Page: 3550
Language: English
DOI: 10.1038/s41375-021-01328-9
PUBMED: 34172893
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC8632688
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 3 January 2022 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Virginia Klimek
    147 Klimek