A phase I multidose study of dacetuzumab (SGN-40; humanized anti-CD40 monoclonal antibody) in patients with multiple myeloma

Mohamad Hussein, James R Berenson, Ruben Niesvizky, Nikhil Munshi, Jeffrey Matous, Ronald Sobecks, Kate Harrop, Jonathan G Drachman, Nancy Whiting, Mohamad Hussein, James R Berenson, Ruben Niesvizky, Nikhil Munshi, Jeffrey Matous, Ronald Sobecks, Kate Harrop, Jonathan G Drachman, Nancy Whiting

Abstract

This first-in-human, phase I study evaluated the safety, maximum-tolerated dose, pharmacokinetics, and antitumor activity of dacetuzumab in 44 patients with advanced multiple myeloma. Patients received intravenous dacetuzumab, either in 4 uniform weekly doses (first 4 cohorts) or using a 5-week intrapatient dose escalation schedule (7 subsequent cohorts; the last 3 cohorts received steroid pre-medication). An initial dose of 4 mg/kg dacetuzumab exceeded the maximum-tolerated dose for uniform weekly dosing. Intrapatient dose escalation with steroid pre-medication appeared effective in reducing symptoms of cytokine release syndrome and the maximum-tolerated dose with this dosing schema was 12 mg/kg/week. Adverse events potentially related to dacetuzumab included cytokine release syndrome symptoms, non-infectious ocular inflammation, and elevated hepatic enzymes. Peak dacetuzumab blood levels increased with dose. Nine patients (20%) had a best clinical response of stable disease. The observed safety profile suggested that dacetuzumab may be combined with other multiple myeloma therapies. Two combination trials are ongoing. Clinical trials gov identifier: NCT00079716.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Mean (+SD) serum concentration vs. time profiles for dacetuzumab by cohort in cycle 1. (A) Group A patients. (B) Group B patients. Mean Cmax and Cmin could not be summarized for Cohorts V and VI due to missing values.

Source: PubMed

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