Targeted therapy with nanatinostat and valganciclovir in recurrent EBV-positive lymphoid malignancies: A phase 1b/2 study Journal Article


Authors: Haverkos, B.; Alpdogan, O.; Baiocchi, R.; Brammer, J. E.; Feldman, T. A.; Capra, M.; Brem, E. A.; Nair, S.; Scheinberg, P.; Pereira, J.; Shune, L.; Joffe, E.; Young, P.; Spruill, S.; Katkov, A.; McRae, R.; Royston, I.; Faller, D. V.; Rojkjaer, L.; Porcu, P.
Article Title: Targeted therapy with nanatinostat and valganciclovir in recurrent EBV-positive lymphoid malignancies: A phase 1b/2 study
Abstract: Lymphomas are not infrequently associated with the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and EBV positivity is linked to worse outcomes in several subtypes. Nanatinostat is a class-I selective oral histone deacetylase inhibitor that induces the expression of lytic EBV BGLF4 protein kinase in EBV+ tumor cells, activating ganciclovir via phosphorylation, resulting in tumor cell apoptosis. This phase 1b/2 study investigated the combination of nanatinostat with valganciclovir in patients aged ≥18 years with EBV+ lymphomas relapsed/refractory to ≥1 prior systemic therapy with no viable curative treatment options. In the phase 1b part, 25 patients were enrolled into 5 dose escalation cohorts to determine the recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D) for phase 2 expansion. Phase 2 patients (n = 30) received RP2D (nanatinostat 20 mg daily, 4 days per week with valganciclovir 900 mg orally daily) for 28-day cycles. The primary end points were safety, RP2D determination (phase 1b), and overall response rate (ORR; phase 2). Overall, 55 patients were enrolled (B–non-Hodgkin lymphoma [B-NHL], [n = 10]; T-cell/natural killer cell-NHL, [n = 21]; classical Hodgkin lymphoma, [n = 11]; and immunodeficiency-associated lymphoproliferative disorders, [n = 13]). The ORR was 40% in 43 evaluable patients (complete response rate [CRR], 19% [n = 8]) with a median duration of response of 10.4 months. For T-cell/natural killer cell-NHL (n = 15; all refractory to the last prior therapy), the ORR/CRR ratio was 60%/27%. The most common adverse events were nausea (38% any grade) and cytopenia (grade 3/4 neutropenia [29%], thrombocytopenia [20%], and anemia [20%]). This novel oral regimen provided encouraging efficacy across several EBV+ lymphoma subtypes and warrants further evaluation; a confirmatory phase 2 study (NCT05011058) is underway. This phase 1b/2 study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT03397706. © 2023 by Begell House, Inc.
Journal Title: Blood Advances
Volume: 7
Issue: 20
ISSN: 2473-9529
Publisher: American Society of Hematology  
Date Published: 2023-10-24
Start Page: 6339
End Page: 6350
Language: English
DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2023010330
PUBMED: 37530631
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC10587711
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Erel Joffe
    82 Joffe