npj Precision Oncology (Jul 2024)

Phase II study of talazoparib in advanced cancers with BRCA1/2, DNA repair, and PTEN alterations

  • Sarina A. Piha-Paul,
  • Chieh Tseng,
  • Cheuk Hong Leung,
  • Ying Yuan,
  • Daniel D. Karp,
  • Vivek Subbiah,
  • David Hong,
  • Siqing Fu,
  • Aung Naing,
  • Jordi Rodon,
  • Milind Javle,
  • Jaffer A. Ajani,
  • Kanwal P. Raghav,
  • Neeta Somaiah,
  • Gordon B. Mills,
  • Apostolia M. Tsimberidou,
  • Xiaofeng Zheng,
  • Ken Chen,
  • Funda Meric-Bernstam

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41698-024-00634-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Cancer cells with BRCA1/2 deficiencies are sensitive to poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors. We evaluated the efficacy of talazoparib in DNA-Damage Repair (DDR)-altered patients. In this phase II trial, patients were enrolled onto one of four cohorts based on molecular alterations: (1) somatic BRCA1/2, (2) other homologous recombination repair pathway, (3) PTEN and (4) germline BRCA1/2. The primary endpoint was a clinical benefit rate (CBR): complete response, partial response or stable disease ≥24 weeks. 79 patients with a median of 4 lines of therapy were enrolled. CBR for cohorts 1–4 were: 32.5%, 19.7%, 9.4% and 30.6%, respectively. PTEN mutations correlated with reduced survival and a trend towards shorter time to progression.Talazoparib demonstrated clinical benefit in selected DDR-altered patients. PTEN mutations/loss patients derived limited clinical benefit. Further study is needed to determine whether PTEN is prognostic or predictive of response to PARP inhibitors.