JTO Clinical and Research Reports (Nov 2020)

Expansion Phase 1 Study of Pegargiminase Plus Pemetrexed and Cisplatin in Patients With Argininosuccinate Synthetase 1–Deficient Mesothelioma: Safety, Efficacy, and Resistance Mechanisms

  • Peter W. Szlosarek, MD, PhD,
  • Melissa M. Phillips, MD, PhD,
  • Iuliia Pavlyk, PhD,
  • Jeremy Steele, MD,
  • Jonathan Shamash, MD,
  • James Spicer, MD, PhD,
  • Sanjeev Kumar, MD,
  • Simon Pacey, MD, PhD,
  • Xiaoxing Feng, PhD,
  • Amanda Johnston, PhD,
  • John Bomalaski, MD,
  • Graeme Moir, MD,
  • Kelvin Lau, MD,
  • Stephen Ellis, MD,
  • Michael Sheaff, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 4
p. 100093

Abstract

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Introduction: Pegargiminase (ADI-PEG 20; ADI) degrades arginine and potentiates pemetrexed (Pem) cytotoxicity in argininosuccinate synthetase 1 (ASS1)–deficient malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM). We conducted a phase 1 dose-expansion study at the recommended phase 2 dose of ADI-PEG 20 with Pem and cisplatin (ADIPemCis), to further evaluate arginine-lowering therapy in ASS1–deficient MPM and explore the mechanisms of resistance. Methods: A total of 32 patients with ASS1–deficient MPM (11 epithelioid; 10 biphasic;11 sarcomatoid) who were chemonaive received weekly intramuscular pegargiminase (36 mg/m2) with Pem (500 mg/m2) and cisplatin (75 mg/m2) intravenously, every 3 weeks (six cycles maximum). Maintenance pegargiminase was permitted until disease progression or withdrawal. Safety, pharmacodynamics, immunogenicity, and efficacy were determined. Biopsies were performed in progressing patients to explore the mechanisms of resistance to pegargiminase. Results: The treatment was well tolerated. Most adverse events were of grade 1/2, whereas four nonhematologic grade 3/4 adverse events related to pegargiminase were reversible. Plasma arginine decreased whereas citrulline increased; this was maintained by 18 weeks of ADIPemCis therapy. The disease control rate in 31 assessed patients was 93.5% (n = 29 of 31; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 78.6%–99.2%), with a partial response rate of 35.5% (n = 11 of 31; 95% CI: 19.2%–54.6%). The median progression-free and overall survivals were 5.6 (95% CI: 4.0–6.0) and 10.1 (95% CI: 6.1–11.1) months, respectively. Progression biopsies on pegargiminase revealed a statistically significant influx of macrophages (n = 6; p = 0.0255) and patchy tumoral ASS1 reexpression (n = 2 of 6). In addition, we observed increased tumoral programmed death-ligand 1—an ADI-PEG 20 inducible gene—and the formation of CD3-positive T lymphocyte aggregates on disease progression (n = 2 of 5). Conclusions: The dose expansion of ADIPemCis confirmed the high clinical activity and good tolerability in ASS1–deficient poor-prognosis mesothelioma, underpinning an ongoing phase 3 study (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02709512). Notably, resistance to pegargiminase correlated with marked macrophage recruitment and—along with the tumor immune microenvironment—warrants further study to optimize arginine deprivation for the treatment of mesothelioma.

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