Abstract

124 Background: mCRPC has a poor prognosis and immunotherapies are largely ineffective. PSMA is a promising therapeutic target in mCRPC. Pasotuxizumab is a PSMA x CD3 BiTE immune therapy that mediates killing of tumor cells by T cells. Methods: NCT01723475 was a first-in-human, multicenter, dose-escalation study in patients (pts) with mCRPC refractory to standard therapy. Pts received continuous IV infusion of pasotuxizumab in cohorts of 3–4 pts. Dose-escalation followed a continuous reassessment methodology. The primary objective was to determine safety and maximum tolerated dose (MTD); secondary objectives included pharmacokinetics, biomarkers, and tumor response. Results: 16 pts were enrolled into 5 dosing cohorts (5 µg/d, n=3; 10 µg/d, n=4; 20 µg/d, n=3; 40 µg/d, n=4; 80 µg/d, n=2). All pts had ≥1 AE of any grade; most common were fever (94%), chills (69%), and fatigue (50%). 13 pts (81%) had ≥1 AE of grade ≥3; most common were decreased lymphocytes and infections (both 44%). No grade 5 AE occurred. A serious drug-related AE was reported for 1 pt (fatigue, 20 µg/d). No antidrug antibodies were observed. Recruitment was stopped before MTD was reached to allow initiation of a new study sponsored by Amgen. Antitumor activity as indicated by PSA serum level decline was dose dependent, with a mean best PSA change per dosing cohort vs baseline of +0.74% (5 µg/d), −17.9% (10 µg/d), −37.4% (20 µg/d), −42.5% (40 µg/d) and −54.9% (80 µg/d). PSA decreases ≥50% occurred in 3 pts (n=1 each in 20 µg/d, 40 µg/d, 80 µg/d cohorts). One long-term PSA responder was treated for 14 months (40 µg/d) and one for 19.4 months (80 µg/d). The latter pt showed a complete regression of soft-tissue metastases and marked regression of bone metastases by PSMA-PET/CT, >90% reduction in PSA and alkaline phosphatase, and a significant and durable improvement in disease related symptoms. Conclusions: Pasotuxizumab had an acceptable safety profile and dose-dependent clinical activity in mCRPC pts. There were two long term responders in the dose escalation. This is the first clinical study showing that a BiTE immune therapy can be efficacious in solid tumors. Clinical trial information: NCT01723475.

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