A phase I study of KIN-3248, an irreversible small-molecule pan-FGFR inhibitor, in patients with advanced FGFR2/3-driven solid tumors Journal Article


Authors: Garmezy, B.; Borad, M. J.; Bahleda, R.; Perez, C. A.; Chen, L. T.; Kato, S.; Oh, D. Y.; Severson, P.; Tam, B. Y.; Quah, C. S.; Harding, J. J.
Article Title: A phase I study of KIN-3248, an irreversible small-molecule pan-FGFR inhibitor, in patients with advanced FGFR2/3-driven solid tumors
Abstract: PURPOSE: Despite efficacy of approved FGFR inhibitors, emergence of polyclonal secondary mutations in the FGFR kinase domain leads to acquired resistance. KIN-3248 is a selective, irreversible, orally bioavailable, small-molecule inhibitor of FGFR1-4 that blocks both primary oncogenic and secondary kinase domain resistance FGFR alterations. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: A first-in-human, phase I study of KIN-3248 was conducted in patients with advanced solid tumors harboring FGFR2 and/or FGFR3 gene alterations (NCT05242822). The primary objective was determination of MTD/recommended phase II dose (RP2D). Secondary and exploratory objectives included antitumor activity, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and molecular response by circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) clearance. RESULTS: Fifty-four patients received doses ranging from 5 to 50 mg orally daily across six cohorts. Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (48.1%), gastric (9.3%), and urothelial (7.4%) were the most common tumors. Tumors harbored FGFR2 (68.5%) or FGFR3 (31.5%) alterations-23 (42.6%) received prior FGFR inhibitors. One dose-limiting toxicity (hypersensitivity) occurred in cohort 1 (5 mg). Treatment-related, adverse events included hyperphosphatemia, diarrhea, and stomatitis. The MTD/RP2D was not established. Exposure was dose proportional and concordant with hyperphosphatemia. Five partial responses were observed; 4 in FGFR inhibitor naïve and 1 in FGFR pretreated patients. Pretreatment ctDNA profiling confirmed FGFR2/3 alterations in 63.3% of cases and clearance at cycle 2 associated with radiographic response. CONCLUSION: The trial was terminated early for commercial considerations; therefore, RP2D was not established. Preliminary clinical data suggest that KIN-3248 is a safe, oral FGFR1-4 inhibitor with favorable pharmacokinetic parameters, though further dose escalation was required to nominate the MTD/RP2D. SIGNIFICANCE: KIN-3248 was a rationally designed, next generation selective FGFR inhibitor, that was effective in interfering with both FGFR wild-type and mutant signaling. Clinical data indicate that KIN-3248 is safe with a signal of antitumor activity. Translational science support the mechanism of action in that serum phosphate was proportional with exposure, paired biopsies suggested phospho-ERK inhibition (a downstream target of FGFR2/3), and ctDNA clearance may act as a RECIST response surrogate. © 2024 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.
Keywords: adult; aged; aged, 80 and over; middle aged; genetics; mutation; clinical trial; antineoplastic agents; antineoplastic agent; neoplasm; neoplasms; protein kinase inhibitor; fibroblast growth factor receptor 3; protein kinase inhibitors; blood; maximum tolerated dose; phase 1 clinical trial; fibroblast growth factor receptor 2; receptor, fibroblast growth factor, type 2; receptor, fibroblast growth factor, type 3; very elderly; humans; human; male; female; circulating tumor dna; fgfr2 protein, human; fgfr3 protein, human
Journal Title: Cancer Research Communications
Volume: 4
Issue: 4
ISSN: 2767-9764
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2024-04-01
Start Page: 1165
End Page: 1173
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/2767-9764.Crc-24-0137
PUBMED: 38602417
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11060137
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) acknowledged in PubMed and PDF -- MSK corresponding author is James Harding -- Source: Scopus
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  1. James Joseph Harding
    250 Harding