Antitumour activity of MDV3100 in castration-resistant prostate cancer: A phase 1-2 study Journal Article


Authors: Scher, H. I.; Anand, A.; Rathkopf, D.; Shelkey, J.; Morris, M. J.; Danila, D. C.; Larson, S.; Humm, J.; Fleisher, M.; Sawyers, C. L.; Beer, T. M.; Alumkal, J.; Higano, C. S.; Yu, E. Y.; Taplin, M. E.; Efstathiou, E.; Hung, D.; Hirmand, M.; Seely, L.
Article Title: Antitumour activity of MDV3100 in castration-resistant prostate cancer: A phase 1-2 study
Abstract: Background MDV3100 is an androgen-receptor antagonist that blocks androgens from binding to the androgen receptor and prevents nuclear translocation and co-activator recruitment of the ligand-receptor complex. It also induces tumour cell apoptosis, and has no agonist activity. Because growth of castration-resistant prostate cancer is dependent on continued androgen-receptor signalling, we assessed the antitumour activity and safety of MDV3100 in men with this disease. Methods This phase 1-2 study was undertaken in fi ve US centres in 140 patients. Patients with progressive, metastatic, castration-resistant prostate cancer were enrolled in dose-escalation cohorts of three to six patients and given an oral daily starting dose of MDV3100 30 mg. The fi nal daily doses studied were 30 mg (n=3), 60 mg (27), 150 mg (28), 240 mg (29), 360 mg (28), 480 mg (22), and 600 mg (3). The primary objective was to identify the safety and tolerability profi le of MDV3100 and to establish the maximum tolerated dose. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00510718. Findings We noted antitumour eff ects at all doses, including decreases in serum prostate-specifi c antigen of 50% or more in 78 (56%) patients, responses in soft tissue in 13 (22%) of 59 patients, stabilised bone disease in 61 (56%) of 109 patients, and conversion from unfavourable to favourable circulating tumour cell counts in 25 (49%) of the 51 patients. PET imaging of 22 patients to assess androgen-receptor blockade showed decreased18F-fl uoro-5α-dihydrotestosterone binding at doses from 60 mg to 480 mg per day (range 20-100%). The median time to progression was 47 weeks (95% CI 34-not reached) for radiological progression. The maximum tolerated dose for sustained treatment (>28 days) was 240 mg. The most common grade 3-4 adverse event was dose-dependent fatigue (16 [11%] patients), which generally resolved after dose reduction. Interpretation We recorded encouraging antitumour activity with MDV3100 in patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer. The results of this phase 1-2 trial validate in man preclinical studies implicating sustained androgenreceptor signalling as a driver in this disease. Funding Medivation, the Prostate Cancer Foundation, National Cancer Institute, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, and Department of Defense Prostate Cancer Clinical Trials Consortium.
Keywords: signal transduction; adult; treatment outcome; treatment response; aged; aged, 80 and over; middle aged; unclassified drug; major clinical study; clinical trial; drug tolerability; fatigue; cancer growth; dose response; drug dose reduction; drug safety; drug withdrawal; bone metastasis; pathophysiology; cancer patient; cancer radiotherapy; positron emission tomography; lymph node metastasis; antineoplastic agent; anorexia; prostate specific antigen; metastasis; drug eruption; phase 2 clinical trial; anemia; nausea; methylphenidate; olanzapine; calcium; antineoplastic activity; drug effect; dose-response relationship, drug; validation study; arthralgia; cancer hormone therapy; drug dose escalation; drug receptor binding; prostate cancer; prostatic neoplasms; chemotherapy induced emesis; heart infarction; multicenter study; prostate tumor; fluorodeoxyglucose f 18; tumor cell; androgen antagonists; drug derivative; cell count; androgen receptor; visceral metastasis; seizure; optimal drug dose; maximum plasma concentration; time to maximum plasma concentration; drug absorption; maximum tolerated dose; phase 1 clinical trial; antiandrogen; mdv 3100; orchiectomy; receptor blocking; antineoplastic agents, hormonal; drug half life; drug dose increase; erythrocyte transfusion; prochlorperazine; antineoplastic hormone agonists and antagonists; androstanolone; hypocalcemia; castration resistant prostate cancer; phenylthiohydantoin; circulating tumour cell
Journal Title: Lancet
Volume: 375
Issue: 9724
ISSN: 0140-6736
Publisher: Elsevier Science, Inc.  
Date Published: 2010-04-24
Start Page: 1437
End Page: 1446
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(10)60172-9
PUBMED: 20398925
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC2948179
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 44" - "Export Date: 20 April 2011" - "CODEN: LANCA" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Charles L Sawyers
    225 Sawyers
  2. Michael Morris
    577 Morris
  3. Dana Elizabeth Rathkopf
    272 Rathkopf
  4. John Laurence Humm
    433 Humm
  5. Steven M Larson
    958 Larson
  6. Martin Fleisher
    312 Fleisher
  7. Howard Scher
    1130 Scher
  8. Daniel C Danila
    154 Danila
  9. Aseem Anand
    61 Anand