Autogene cevumeran with or without atezolizumab in advanced solid tumors: A phase 1 trial Journal Article


Authors: Lopez, J.; Powles, T.; Braiteh, F.; Siu, L. L.; LoRusso, P.; Friedman, C. F.; Balmanoukian, A. S.; Gordon, M.; Yachnin, J.; Rottey, S.; Karydis, I.; Fisher, G. A.; Schmidt, M.; Schuler, M.; Sullivan, R. J.; Burris, H. A.; Galvao, V.; Henick, B. S.; Dirix, L.; Jaeger, D.; Ott, P. A.; Wong, K. M.; Jerusalem, G.; Schiza, A.; Fong, L.; Steeghs, N.; Leidner, R. S.; Rittmeyer, A.; Laurie, S. A.; Gort, E.; Aljumaily, R.; Melero, I.; Sabado, R. L.; Rhee, I.; Mancuso, M. R.; Muller, L.; Fine, G. D.; Yadav, M.; Kim, L.; Leveque, V. J. P.; Robert, A.; Darwish, M.; Qi, T.; Zhu, J.; Zhang, J.; Twomey, P.; Rao, G. K.; Low, D. W.; Petry, C.; Lo, A. A.; Schartner, J. M.; Delamarre, L.; Mellman, I.; Löwer, M.; Müller, F.; Derhovanessian, E.; Cortini, A.; Manning, L.; Maurus, D.; Brachtendorf, S.; Lörks, V.; Omokoko, T.; Godehardt, E.; Becker, D.; Hawner, C.; Wallrapp, C.; Albrecht, C.; Kröner, C.; Tadmor, A. D.; Diekmann, J.; Vormehr, M.; Jork, A.; Paruzynski, A.; Lang, M.; Blake, J.; Hennig, O.; Kuhn, A. N.; Sahin, U.; Türeci, Ö; Camidge, D. R.
Article Title: Autogene cevumeran with or without atezolizumab in advanced solid tumors: A phase 1 trial
Abstract: Effective targeting of somatic cancer mutations to enhance the efficacy of cancer immunotherapy requires an individualized approach. Autogene cevumeran is a uridine messenger RNA lipoplex-based individualized neoantigen-specific immunotherapy designed from tumor-specific somatic mutation data obtained from tumor tissue of each individual patient to stimulate T cell responses against up to 20 neoantigens. This ongoing phase 1 study evaluated autogene cevumeran as monotherapy (n = 30) and in combination with atezolizumab (n = 183) in pretreated patients with advanced solid tumors. The primary objective was safety and tolerability; exploratory objectives included evaluation of pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, preliminary antitumor activity and immunogenicity. Non-prespecified interim analysis showed that autogene cevumeran was well tolerated and elicited poly-epitopic neoantigen-specific responses, encompassing CD4+ and/or CD8+ T cells, in 71% of patients, most of them undetectable at baseline. Responses were detectable up to 23 months after treatment initiation. CD8+ T cells specific for several neoantigens constituted a median of 7.3% of circulating CD8+ T cells, reaching up to 23% in some patients. Autogene cevumeran-induced T cells were found within tumor lesions constituting up to 7.2% of tumor-infiltrating T cells. Clinical activity was observed, including one objective response in monotherapy dose escalation and in two patients with disease characteristics unfavorable for response to immunotherapy treated in combination with atezolizumab. These findings support the continued development of autogene cevumeran in earlier treatment lines. ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT03289962. © Genentech, Inc. and the Author(s) 2025.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; treatment response; aged; aged, 80 and over; middle aged; major clinical study; somatic mutation; clinical trial; advanced cancer; monotherapy; solid tumor; antineoplastic agent; neoplasm; neoplasms; cd8+ t lymphocyte; cd8-positive t-lymphocytes; cancer immunotherapy; antineoplastic combined chemotherapy protocols; antineoplastic activity; drug effect; pathology; tumor antigen; monoclonal antibody; cancer inhibition; immunology; immunotherapy; antigens, neoplasm; messenger rna; immunogenicity; phase 1 clinical trial; cd4 antigen; drug therapy; adverse drug reaction; procedures; antibodies, monoclonal, humanized; very elderly; humans; human; male; female; article; lipoplex; atezolizumab; autogene cevumeran; difluprednate
Journal Title: Nature Medicine
Volume: 31
ISSN: 1078-8956
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2025-01-01
Start Page: 152
End Page: 164
Language: English
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-024-03334-7
PUBMED: 39762422
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11750724
DOI/URL:
Notes: Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Claire Frances Friedman
    117 Friedman