A phase I, multicenter, open-label, first-in-human, dose-escalation study of the oral smoothened inhibitor sonidegib (LDE225) in patients with advanced solid tumors Journal Article


Authors: Rodon, J.; Tawbi, H. A.; Thomas, A. L.; Stoller, R. G.; Turtschi, C. P.; Baselga, J.; Sarantopoulos, J.; Mahalingam, D.; Shou, Y. P.; Moles, M. A.; Yang, L.; Granvil, C.; Hurh, E.; Rose, K. L.; Amakye, D. D.; Dummer, R.; Mita, A. C.
Article Title: A phase I, multicenter, open-label, first-in-human, dose-escalation study of the oral smoothened inhibitor sonidegib (LDE225) in patients with advanced solid tumors
Abstract: Purpose: This phase I trial was undertaken to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD), doselimiting toxicities (DLT), safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and preliminary antitumor activity of the novel smoothened inhibitor sonidegib (LDE225), a potent inhibitor of hedgehog signaling, in patients with advanced solid tumors. Experimental Design: Oral sonidegib was administered to 103 patients with advanced solid tumors, including medulloblastoma and basal cell carcinoma (BCC), at doses ranging from 100 to 3,000 mg daily and 250 to 750 mg twice daily, continuously, with a single-dose pharmacokinetics run-in period. Dose escalations were guided by a Bayesian logistic regression model. Safety, tolerability, efficacy, pharmacokinetics, and biomarkers in skin and tumor biopsies were assessed. Results: The MTDs of sonidegib were 800 mg daily and 250 mg twice daily. The main DLT of reversible grade 3/4 elevated serum creatine kinase (18% of patients) was observed at doses >= the MTD in an exposure-dependent manner. Common grade 1/2 adverse events included muscle spasm, myalgia, gastrointestinal toxicities, increased liver enzymes, fatigue, dysgeusia, and alopecia. Sonidegib exposure increased dose proportionally up to 400 mg daily, and displayed nonlinear pharmacokinetics at higher doses. Sonidegib exhibited exposure-dependent reduction in GLI1 mRNA expression. Tumor responses observed in patients with medulloblastoma and BCC were associated with evidence of hedgehog pathway activation. Conclusions: Sonidegib has an acceptable safety profile in patients with advanced solid tumors and exhibits antitumor activity in advanced BCC and relapsed medulloblastoma, both of which are strongly associated with activated hedgehog pathway, as determined by gene expression. (C) 2014 AACR.
Keywords: medulloblastoma; safety; criteria; trials; hedgehog pathway; vismodegib; cancer
Journal Title: Clinical Cancer Research
Volume: 20
Issue: 7
ISSN: 1078-0432
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2014-04-01
Start Page: 1900
End Page: 1909
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000333900000024
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-13-1710
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 24523439
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Jose T Baselga
    484 Baselga