CHK1 inhibition with prexasertib appears to have durable activity in some patients with recurrent ovarian cancer regardless of clinical characteristics, BRCA status, or prior therapies, according to the results of a phase II trial.
The trial included 169 ovarian cancer patients (median age 59 years) who were grouped as follows: platinum resistant, BRCA-wildtype with ≥3 lines prior therapy (cohort 1, n=53); platinum resistant BRCA-wildtype with <3 lines prior therapy (cohort 2, n=46); platinum resistant, BRCA-mutated with prior PARP inhibitor therapy (cohort 3, n=41); platinum refractory, BRCA-mutated, or BRCA-wildtype with any number of prior therapy lines (cohort 4, n=29).
Most patients were diagnosed at stage III/IV (89.9 percent), with the median time from diagnosis being longer in cohorts 1 and 3 (1,554 and 1,803 days, respectively) than in cohorts 2 and 4 (526 and 446 days, respectively). All patients were administered 105-mg/m2 intravenous infusion of prexasertib every 2 weeks (days 1 and 15) in a 4-week cycle, until radiographic disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or patient/physician request to discontinue.
Doses administered were based on the patients’ body surface area at the beginning of each cycle. Dose reductions to 80 (first dose reduction) or 60 mg/m2 (second dose reduction) were required for Grade 3/4 nonhematologic AEs and febrile neutropenia occurring with prophylactic GCSF.
The primary endpoint of objective response rates were 12.1 percent among platinum-resistant patients (cohorts 1-3) and 6.9 percent among platinum-refractory patients (cohort 4).
Disease control rates were 37.1 percent among platinum-resistant patients, being consistent across cohorts, and 31.0 percent among platinum refractory patients.
The safety profile of prexasertib was consistent with the drug’s mechanism of action. The most common treatment-related adverse events of all grades included thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, fatigue, nausea, and anaemia.