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A First-in-Human Dose Finding Study of Camrelizumab in Patients with Advanced or Metastatic Cancer in Australia

Authors :
Jason D, Lickliter
Hui K, Gan
Mark, Voskoboynik
Surein, Arulananda
Bo, Gao
Adnan, Nagrial
Peter, Grimison
Michelle, Harrison
Jianjun, Zou
Lianshan, Zhang
Stacey, Luo
Michael, Lahn
Howard, Kallender
Andrea, Mannucci
Catello, Somma
Katherine, Woods
Andreas, Behren
Pablo, Fernandez-Penas
Michael, Millward
Tarek, Meniawy
Source :
Drug Design, Development and Therapy
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Purpose Camrelizumab inhibits PD-1 in non-clinical models and showed typical non-clinical pharmacokinetic (PK) and safety profiles for an IgG4 monoclonal antibody. We report results from the First-in-Human Phase 1 trial of camrelizumab in Australian population. Methods Camrelizumab was administered to patients with advanced solid tumors who had failed standard therapies. In the dose-escalation phase (n=23), camrelizumab was administered intravenously at 1 mg/kg, 3 mg/kg, 6 mg/kg, and 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks. In dose expansion (n=26), camrelizumab was given at 200 mg or 600 mg every 4 weeks. Results Two dose-limiting toxicities were observed during dose escalation: transaminase elevation and diarrhea (both grade 3). Overall, treatment-related adverse events were consistent with the expected toxicity profile of immune checkpoint inhibition, with the striking exception of the dose-related development of angiomatous skin lesions characterized as reactive cutaneous capillary endothelial proliferation. The PK profile showed a dose-progressive increase in half-life from 3 days at 1 mg/kg to 7 days at 10 mg/kg. Moreover, receptor occupancy assays showed a PD-1 occupancy of >50% in most patients out to 28 days post-dose. The objective response rate was 15.2% (95% CI 6.3–28.9). Conclusion Camrelizumab has manageable toxicity and encouraging preliminary antitumor activity in advanced solid tumors in Australia. Clinical Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02492789.

Details

ISSN :
11778881
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Drug design, development and therapy
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........08ef096f124df58116d919f747b8d50f