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Evofosfamide for the treatment of human papillomavirus-negative head and neck squamous cell carcinoma

Authors :
Reidar Grénman
John Nemunaitis
Mark Zaidi
William R. Wilson
Courtney R. H. Lynch
Trevor D. McKee
Cho R. Hong
Peter Tsai
Charles P. Hart
Dennis Kee
Purvi M. Kakadia
John M. Chaplin
Tet Woo Lee
Bradly G. Wouters
Stephen M. F. Jamieson
Arthur Liu
Nicholas P. McIvor
Francis W. Hunter
Shadia I. Jalal
Cristin G. Print
Nicholas Knowlton
E. Gabriela Chiorean
Nooriyah Poonawala-Lohani
Way W. Wong
Kevin O. Hicks
Dan Li
Laura Caporiccio
Neil Senzer
Avik Shome
Michael A. Curran
Andrew Macann
Pratha Budhani
Maria Kondratyev
Stefan K. Bohlander
Sehrish Butt
Source :
JCI Insight. 3(16)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Evofosfamide (TH-302) is a clinical-stage hypoxia-activated prodrug of a DNA-crosslinking nitrogen mustard that has potential utility for human papillomavirus (HPV) negative head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), in which tumor hypoxia limits treatment outcome. We report the preclinical efficacy, target engagement, preliminary predictive biomarkers and initial clinical activity of evofosfamide for HPV-negative HNSCC. Evofosfamide was assessed in 22 genomically characterized cell lines and 7 cell line–derived xenograft (CDX), patient-derived xenograft (PDX), orthotopic, and syngeneic tumor models. Biomarker analysis used RNA sequencing, whole-exome sequencing, and whole-genome CRISPR knockout screens. Five advanced/metastatic HNSCC patients received evofosfamide monotherapy (480 mg/m2 qw × 3 each month) in a phase 2 study. Evofosfamide was potent and highly selective for hypoxic HNSCC cells. Proliferative rate was a predominant evofosfamide sensitivity determinant and a proliferation metagene correlated with activity in CDX models. Evofosfamide showed efficacy as monotherapy and with radiotherapy in PDX models, augmented CTLA-4 blockade in syngeneic tumors, and reduced hypoxia in nodes disseminated from an orthotopic model. Of 5 advanced HNSCC patients treated with evofosfamide, 2 showed partial responses while 3 had stable disease. In conclusion, evofosfamide shows promising efficacy in aggressive HPV-negative HNSCC, with predictive biomarkers in development to support further clinical evaluation in this indication.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23793708
Volume :
3
Issue :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JCI Insight
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....34a9a4bdc6558f360d68cb0559b84db8