Phase II clinical trial of everolimus in a pan-cancer cohort of patients with mTOR pathway alterations

E Adib, K Klonowska, K Giannikou, KT Do… - Clinical Cancer …, 2021 - AACR
E Adib, K Klonowska, K Giannikou, KT Do, S Pruitt-Thompson, K Bhushan, MI Milstein…
Clinical Cancer Research, 2021AACR
Purpose: This was a multicenter, histology-agnostic, single-arm prospective phase II trial of
therapeutic activity of everolimus, an oral mTORC1 inhibitor, in patients with advanced solid
tumors that harbored TSC1/TSC2 or MTOR mutations. Patients and Methods: Patients with
tumors with inactivating TSC1/TSC2 or activating MTOR mutations identified in any Clinical
Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA)-certified laboratory were eligible. Patients
were treated with everolimus 10 mg once daily until disease progression or unacceptable …
Purpose
This was a multicenter, histology-agnostic, single-arm prospective phase II trial of therapeutic activity of everolimus, an oral mTORC1 inhibitor, in patients with advanced solid tumors that harbored TSC1/TSC2 or MTOR mutations.
Patients and Methods
Patients with tumors with inactivating TSC1/TSC2 or activating MTOR mutations identified in any Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA)-certified laboratory were eligible. Patients were treated with everolimus 10 mg once daily until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. The primary endpoint was objective response rate (ORR). Whole-exome sequencing was performed to identify co-occurring genomic alterations.
Results
Between November 2015 and October 2018, 30 patients were enrolled at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Tumors harbored TSC1 (13/30), TSC2 (15/30), concurrent TSC1 and TSC2 (1/30), or MTOR (1/30) mutations. The most common treatment-related adverse event of any grade was mucositis (8/30, 27%); 1 patient had fatal pneumonitis. Partial responses were seen in 2 patients [7%; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1%–22%]. Median progression-free survival was 2.3 months (95% CI, 1.8–3.7 months) and median overall survival (OS) was 7.3 months (95% CI, 4.5–12.7 months). There was no clear association between other genomic alterations and response. Of the 2 patients with objective response, 1 had upper tract urothelial carcinoma with biallelic inactivation of TSC1 and high tumor mutation burden, and the other had uterine carcinoma with biallelic TSC2-inactivating mutations and PEComa-like pathologic features.
Conclusions
Everolimus therapy had a disappointing ORR (7%) in this pan-cancer, mutation-selected, basket study.
See related commentary by Kato and Cohen, p. 3807
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