Abstract

Abstract Background: DCC-2618 is a potent switch control inhibitor of KIT and PDGFRα kinases maintains potent inhibition of mutant forms across all exon regions in preclinical models. Gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) is an important disease to achieve a proof-of-concept due to the heterogeneity of resistance mutations in KIT which emerge on treatment with approved KIT inhibitors. In later lines of therapy resistance mechanisms independent of the KIT gene have also been described. Methods: The ongoing phase 1, PK-guided dose escalation study of DCC-2618 given orally BID [28-day cycle] tested doses from 20 mg to 200 mg in patients (pts) with advanced solid tumors including GIST (NCT02571036). We report preliminary longitudinal results of plasma cell free (cf) DNA sequencing by Guardant 360 collected throughout the study and levels of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) based on a viral telomerase promoter-driven GFP expression assay. Results: To date, 24 out of 31 enrolled pts had metastatic KITm GIST refractory to standard therapy. A high, total mean exposure of DCC-2618 and its active metabolite was achieved at 100 and 150 mg BID, affording steady state Cmax >5 µM in Cycle 1. Starting with 50 mg BID dose level, concentrations of total drug exceeding IC90 of the most resistant mutations to DCC-2618 were achieved. Next-generation sequencing of plasma cfDNA revealed a total of 40 KIT mutations in 16 of 18 GIST pts at baseline. DCC-2618 led to rapid decrease and/or clearance of the heterogeneous array of KIT mutations from plasma cfDNA including exons 9, 11, 13, 14, 17, and 18. Independent of suppressed KIT mutation burden, longitudinal monitoring of cfDNA revealed changes in non-KIT oncogenic mutations which may contribute to heterogenous mechanisms of resistance. KIT mutation burden will be correlated with metabolic response assessment by PET scans and exposure to DCC-2618. CTCs have been detected in blood from all GIST patients at baseline using a non-biased assay capable of identifying sarcoma cells. Preliminary result show that CTCs with immunofluorescent detection of KIT or PDGFRα, corresponding to their respective mutational status, show 1 of 3 patterns when compared to radiologic response: most pts show relatively stable low levels at stable disease (SD), a minority of pts with prolonged SD a decline in CTCs and 2 pts with progressive disease had significant increase in KIT positive CTCs. Conclusions: DCC-2618 and its active metabolite achieved high plasma concentrations sufficient to inhibit the most resistant KIT mutations at well-tolerated exposures. Monitoring of cfDNA KIT mutation frequency demonstrates rapid clearance of a broad spectrum of KIT mutations in this heavily pretreated GIST patient population and suggests candidate resistance genes that are independent of KIT. Our data provide a first signal that CTC monitoring might represent a potential marker for tumor control in KIT mutant GIST. Citation Format: Filip Janku, Albi Razak, Michael Gordon, David Brooks, Daniel Flynn, Anu Gupta, Michael Kaufman, Cynthia Leary, Bryan Smith, Deb Westwood, Neeta Somaiah, Elena Helman, Eric Gerstenberger, Oliver Rosen, Suzanne George. Translational research in a phase I proof-of-concept study supports that DCC-2618 is a pan-KIT inhibitor [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2017; 2017 Apr 1-5; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2017;77(13 Suppl):Abstract nr LB-039. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2017-LB-039

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