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A phase I/Ib trial targeting the Pi3k/Akt pathway using perifosine: Long-term progression-free survival of patients with resistant neuroblastoma

Authors :
Brian H, Kushner
Nai-Kong V, Cheung
Shakeel, Modak
Oren J, Becher
Ellen M, Basu
Stephen S, Roberts
Kim, Kramer
Ira J, Dunkel
Source :
International journal of cancer. 140(2)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

AKT plays a pivotal role in driving the malignant phenotype of many cancers, including high-risk neuroblastoma (HR-NB). AKT signaling, however, is active in normal tissues, raising concern about excessive toxicity from its suppression. The oral AKT inhibitor perifosine showed tolerable toxicity in adults and in our phase I trial in children with solid tumors (clinicaltrials.gov NCT00776867). We now report on the HR-NB experience. HR-NB patients received perifosine 50–75mg/m2/day after a loading dose of 100–200mg/m2 on day 1, and continued on study until progressive disease. The 27 HR-NB patients included three treated for primary refractory disease and 24 with disease resistant to salvage therapy after 1–5 (median 2) relapses; only one had MYCN-amplified HR-NB. Pharmacokinetic studies showed μM concentrations consistent with cytotoxic levels in preclinical models. Nine patients (all MYCN-non-amplified) remained progression-free through 43+ to 74+ (median 54+) months from study entry, including the sole patient to show a complete response and eight patients who had persistence of abnormal 123I-metaiodobenzylguanidine skeletal uptake but never developed progressive disease. Toxicity was negligible in all 27 patients, even with the prolonged treatment (11-to-62 months, median 38) in the nine long-term progression-free survivors. The clinical findings 1) confirm the safety of therapeutic serum levels of an AKT inhibitor in children; 2) support perifosine for MYCN-non-amplified HR-NB as monotherapy after completion of standard treatment or combined with other agents (based on preclinical studies) to maximize antitumor effects; and 3) highlight the welcome possibility that refractory or relapsed MYCN-non-amplified HR-NB is potentially curable.

Details

ISSN :
10970215
Volume :
140
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of cancer
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........7a5b5dcf9a44cee5595d5fa155cc9623