Frontiers in Oncology (Jan 2024)

PARC: a phase I/II study evaluating the safety and activity of pegylated recombinant human arginase BCT-100 in relapsed/refractory cancers of children and young adults

  • Nicola Fenwick,
  • Rebekah Weston,
  • Keith Wheatley,
  • Jodie Hodgson,
  • Lynley Marshall,
  • Martin Elliott,
  • Guy Makin,
  • Antony Ng,
  • Bernadette Brennan,
  • Stephen Lowis,
  • Jenny Adamski,
  • John Paul Kilday,
  • Rachel Cox,
  • Mike Gattens,
  • Andrew Moore,
  • Toby Trahair,
  • Milind Ronghe,
  • Martin Campbell,
  • Helen Campbell,
  • Molly W. Williams,
  • Maria Kirby,
  • Natasha Van Eijkelenburg,
  • Jennifer Keely,
  • Ugo Scarpa,
  • Victoria Stavrou,
  • Livingstone Fultang,
  • Sarah Booth,
  • Paul Cheng,
  • Carmela De Santo,
  • Francis Mussai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2024.1296576
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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BackgroundThe survival for many children with relapsed/refractory cancers remains poor despite advances in therapies. Arginine metabolism plays a key role in the pathophysiology of a number of pediatric cancers. We report the first in child study of a recombinant human arginase, BCT-100, in children with relapsed/refractory hematological, solid or CNS cancers.ProcedurePARC was a single arm, Phase I/II, international, open label study. BCT-100 was given intravenously over one hour at weekly intervals. The Phase I section utilized a modified 3 + 3 design where escalation/de-escalation was based on both the safety profile and the complete depletion of arginine (defined as adequate arginine depletion; AAD <8μM arginine in the blood after 4 doses of BCT-100). The Phase II section was designed to further evaluate the clinical activity of BCT-100 at the pediatric RP2D determined in the Phase I section, by recruitment of patients with pediatric cancers into 4 individual groups. A primary evaluation of response was conducted at eight weeks with patients continuing to receive treatment until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.Results49 children were recruited globally. The Phase I cohort of the trial established the Recommended Phase II Dose of 1600U/kg iv weekly in children, matching that of adults. BCT-100 was very well tolerated. No responses defined as a CR, CRi or PR were seen in any cohort within the defined 8 week primary evaluation period. However a number of these relapsed/refractory patients experienced prolonged radiological SD.ConclusionArginine depletion is a clinically safe and achievable strategy in children with cancer. The RP2D of BCT-100 in children with relapsed/refractory cancers is established at 1600U/kg intravenously weekly and can lead to sustained disease stability in this hard to treat population.Clinical trial registrationEudraCT, 2017-002762-44; ISRCTN, 21727048; and ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03455140.

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