Conference Coverage

Antibody has ‘very promising activity’ in rel/ref CTCL


 

Photo by Larry Young

Youn H. Kim, MD

LA JOLLA, CA—An antibody targeting KIR3DL2 has “very promising activity” in relapsed/refractory cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL), according to a speaker at the 10th Annual T-cell Lymphoma Forum.

The antibody, IPH4102, produced an overall response rate (ORR) of 44% in a phase 1 trial of CTCL patients, with an ORR of 50% in patients with Sézary syndrome (SS).

There were 2 serious adverse events (AEs) that were considered possibly related to IPH4102, and 1 of these was fatal.

Youn H. Kim, MD, of Stanford Cancer Institute in Palo Alto, California, presented these results at this year’s T-cell Lymphoma Forum. The research was sponsored by Innate Pharma, the company developing IPH4102.

“KIR3DL2 is a target that’s a member of the killer immunoglobulin-like receptor [KIR] family, and it’s also very specifically expressed in CTCL,” Dr Kim explained. “The antibody [IPH4102] is Fc-modified to enhance the antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity and also works by antibody-dependent cell phagocytosis. It binds and, with the immunologic effect, kills the cancer cells.”

“[IPH4102] is specific for cancer cells because [KIR3DL2] is only minimally expressed in normal T cells as well as natural killer [NK] cells. About a third of NK cells that do express [KIR3DL2] don’t get affected [by IPH4102]. So it looks like the killer cells don’t kill each other, and they specifically target the neoplastic cells.”

Patients

Dr Kim and her colleagues have tested IPH4102 in 25 patients with relapsed/refractory CTCL—20 with SS, 4 with mycosis fungoides (MF), and 1 with CD4+ CTCL not otherwise specified. At baseline, patients had a median age of 71 (range, 42-90).

The patients had received a median of 4 prior systemic regimens (range, 2-10). Among the MF and SS patients, 1 patient had stage IB disease, 3 had stage IIB, and 20 had stage IVA disease.

Treatment

This study has a dose-escalation portion (accelerated 3+3 design) and an expansion portion. Dr Kim presented results for the 25 patients in the dose-escalation portion, which was completed in May 2017.

Patients received IPH4102 at 10 dose levels, ranging from 0.0001 mg/kg to 10 mg/kg. They received the drug once weekly for 4 doses, every 2 weeks for 10 doses, and every 4 weeks thereafter. They were treated until progression or unacceptable toxicity.

The expansion cohorts (which include SS and transformed MF patients) started enrolling in July 2017, with patients receiving IPH4102 at the recommended phase 2 dose—750 mg.

Safety

There were no dose-limiting toxicities with IPH4102. So the equivalent of 10 mg/kg—a 750 mg flat dose—was deemed the recommended phase 2 (and expansion) dose.

The incidence of AEs was 92% (n=23), and the incidence of treatment-related AEs was 52% (n=13).

Treatment-related AEs included lymphopenia (16%, n=4), asthenia (12%, n=3), nausea (8%, n=2), chills (8%, n=2), pyrexia (8%, n=2), arthralgia (8%, n=2), and muscle spasms (8%, n=2).

Eight patients had serious AEs, and 2 had serious AEs that were considered possibly related to treatment.

One patient had grade 2 atrial flutter diagnosed 1 hour after the first dose of IPH4102. The patient had a history of cardiac arrhythmia. She was hospitalized after the atrial flutter, received amiodarone, and the arrhythmia resolved. She went on to receive 15 more doses of IPH4102 without recurrence.

The other patient with a serious AE considered possibly related to treatment had hepatitis that occurred 6 weeks after the last dose of IPH4102. The patient had discontinued treatment due to progression after receiving IPH4102 for a year and achieving a partial response (PR).

This patient ultimately died of the hepatitis. Another fatal AE, considered unrelated to treatment, was Staphylococcus aureus sepsis.

“The safety looks very solid,” Dr Kim said, “[with] very low numbers of any significant severe adverse effects.”

Efficacy

The best global ORR was 44%, with 10 PRs and 1 complete response (CR). Twelve patients had stable disease, and 2 progressed.

In patients with SS, the best global ORR was 50%. One patient had a CR, 9 had PRs, and 8 had stable disease. The ORR was 60% in the skin and a 65% in the blood compartment for patients with SS.

Four responses were ongoing at last follow-up. The median follow-up was 15 months.

The median duration of response for the entire cohort was 8.2 months (range, 64 days to 519+ days). For SS patients, the median duration of response was 9.9 months (range, 64 days to 519+ days).

The median progression-free survival was 9.8 months overall (range, 28 days to 610+ days). For SS patients, the median progression-free survival was 10.8 months (range, 28 days to 610+ days).

“So with the efficacy and the safety profile, we are really hoping to get this drug to the phase 2 level and are excited to move forward,” Dr Kim concluded.

Next Article: