
Tolerability and efficacy of durvalumab in Japanese patients with advanced solid tumors
Author(s) -
Fujiwara Yutaka,
Iguchi Haruo,
Yamamoto Noboru,
Hayama Manabu,
Nii Masahiro,
Ueda Shinya,
Komuro Keiko,
Sugimoto Mariko,
Vlahovic Gordana,
Kozuki Toshiyuki
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cancer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.035
H-Index - 141
eISSN - 1349-7006
pISSN - 1347-9032
DOI - 10.1111/cas.14003
Subject(s) - durvalumab , tolerability , medicine , adverse effect , dosing , population , pharmacokinetics , cancer , immunotherapy , nivolumab , environmental health
Blockade of programmed cell death ligand‐1 with durvalumab has shown efficacy and safety in large, international studies of patients with advanced solid tumors. A phase 1, non‐randomized, open‐label multicenter study was initiated to evaluate durvalumab in a Japanese population. The first part of this study used a standard 3 + 3 dose‐escalation design to determine the optimal dosing schedule of durvalumab. Primary objective was evaluation of safety and tolerability of durvalumab monotherapy. Secondary objectives were to evaluate maximum tolerated dose ( MTD ), immunogenicity, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy. Twenty‐two patients (median age, 61.5 years; range, 41‐76; 64% male) received durvalumab at doses of 1, 3, or 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks (q2w), 15 mg/kg q3w, or 20 mg/kg q4w. Twenty patients discontinued before completing 12 months of treatment as a result of progressive disease and two due to adverse events ( AE ). The most common treatment‐related AE (tr AE ) were rash (18%) and pruritus (14%); two patients had grade ≥3 tr AE including one patient each with hyponatremia and hypothyroidism. No patient experienced a dose‐limiting toxicity ( DLT ) during the DLT evaluation period and the MTD was not identified. There were no AE leading to a fatal outcome during study treatment. Durvalumab showed dose‐proportional pharmacokinetics across the 1‐20 mg/kg dose range; incidence of positive titers for antidrug antibodies was 9%. One patient with lung cancer had a partial response and disease control rate at 12 weeks was 36%. In conclusion, durvalumab at the doses and regimens evaluated was safe and well tolerated in Japanese patients with advanced solid tumors.