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ACTR-12. PHASE 2 STUDY OF DIANHYDROGALACTITOL (VAL-083) IN PATIENTS WITH MGMT-UNMETHYLATED, BEVACIZUMAB-NAÏVE GLIOBLASTOMA IN THE RECURRENT AND ADJUVANT SETTING
Author(s) -
Barbara O’Brien,
Marta Peñas-Prado,
Carolos Kamiya,
Shiao- Pei Weathers,
Alfred Yung,
Monica Loghin,
Rebecca A. Harrison,
Jeffrey Bacha,
Dennis Brown,
Glyn Johnson,
John Langlands,
Richard Schwartz,
Sarath Kanekal,
Lorena Lopez,
John DeGroot
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
neuro-oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.005
H-Index - 125
eISSN - 1523-5866
pISSN - 1522-8517
DOI - 10.1093/neuonc/noz175.055
Subject(s) - temozolomide , bevacizumab , medicine , oncology , phases of clinical research , adverse effect , adjuvant , methyltransferase , radiation therapy , clinical endpoint , adjuvant therapy , clinical trial , cancer , chemotherapy , biology , dna , methylation , genetics
Current standard-of-care for glioblastoma (GBM) includes surgery followed by concurrent therapy with radiation and temozolomide (TMZ) followed by adjuvant TMZ (days 1–5 every 28 days. Almost all GBM patients experience recurrent/progressive disease, with a median survival after recurrence of 3–9 months. Second-line treatment for recurrent GBM with bevacizumab (BEV) has not improved survival, and effective therapies for GBM are lacking. Unmethylated promoter for O6-methylguanine-DNA-methyltransferase (MGMT) is a validated biomarker for TMZ-resistance and is correlated with poor patient prognosis. VAL-083 is a bi-functional DNA-targeting agent which rapidly induces interstrand DNA cross-links at N7-guanine, induces double-strand breaks and acts independent of MGMT DNA repair. The current ongoing trial is a biomarker-driven Phase 2 study in MGMT-unmethylated BEV-naïve adult GBM. The primary objective of this study is to determine the effect of VAL-083 on median overall survival (mOS) for MGMT-unmethylated GBM patients compared to historical control. Secondary efficacy endpoints include progression-free survival (PFS), overall response rate (ORR), duration of response (DOR), and quality-of-life. Thirty-five (35) subjects with recurrent GBM have received 40 mg/m2/day VAL-083 on days 1, 2, 3 of a 21-day cycle as the starting dose. Myelosuppression is the most common adverse event and a higher potential for this toxicity correlated with those patients who received a higher number of cycles of prior TMZ maintenance therapy, (>5 cycles vs. ≤5 cycles, p< 0.05). To minimize the potential for hematological toxicity in rGBM, subsequent subjects initiated treatment at 30 mg/m2/d VAL-083 x 3 consecutive days every 21 days. In addition, since TMZ is of limited value in the MGMT-unmethylated setting, a second arm in newly diagnosed GBM has been included to explore whether substituting TMZ with VAL-083 offers clinical benefit and extends the time to recurrence. Enrollment, safety data and study updates will be presented at the meeting. Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT02717962.

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