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A phase I study of LY3164530, a bispecific antibody targeting MET and EGFR, in patients with advanced or metastatic cancer.

PURPOSE: The phase I study characterized the safety, pharmacokinetics, anti-tumor activity, and recommended phase II dose/schedule of LY3164530 in patients with advanced or metastatic cancer.

METHODS: Patients received LY3164530 on days 1 and 15 (Schedule 1: 300, 600, 1000, and 1250 mg) or Days 1, 8, 15, and 22 (Schedule 2: 500 and 600 mg) of each 28 days cycle. Dose escalation used a modified toxicity probability interval model.

RESULTS: Dose escalation defined a maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of 1000 mg on Schedule 1 and 500 mg on Schedule 2. Treatment-emergent adverse events related to study treatment were consistent with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibition and included maculopapular rash/dermatitis acneiform (83%, Grade 3/4 17%), hypomagnesemia (55%, Grade 3/4 7%), paronychia (35%), fatigue (28%, Grade 3/4 3%), skin fissures (24%), and hypokalemia (21%, Grade 3/4 7%). Partial response was achieved in three patients on Schedule 2 with colorectal cancer (n = 2) or squamous cell cancer. Overall response rate (ORR) was 10.3%, disease control rate (ORR + stable disease [SD]) was 51.7 and 17.2% of patients had SD ≥ 4 months. The in vivo stability of the bispecific antibody was confirmed. Schedule 2 provided greater and more consistent inhibition of mesenchymal-epithelial transition (MET)/EGFR throughout the dosing interval than Schedule 1.

CONCLUSIONS: Although this study defined the LY3164530 MTD and pharmacokinetics on both schedules, significant toxicities associated with EGFR inhibition and lack of a potential predictive biomarker limit future development. Nonetheless, the results provide insight into the development of bispecific antibody therapy.

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