A phase I dose-escalation and expansion study of telaglenastat in patients with advanced or metastatic solid tumors

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Abstract

Purpose: Glutamine is a critical fuel for solid tumors. Interference with glutamine metabolism is deleterious to neoplasia in preclinical models. A phase I study of the oral, first-in-class, glutaminase (GLS) inhibitor telaglenastat was conducted in treatment-refractory solid tumor patients to define recommended phase II dose (RP2D) and evaluate safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics (PD), and antitumor activity. Patients and Methods: Dose escalation by 3 þ 3 design was followed by exploratory tumor-/biomarker-specific cohorts. Results: Among 120 patients, fatigue (23%) and nausea (19%) were the most common toxicity. Maximum tolerated dose was not reached. Correlative analysis indicated >90% GLS inhibition in platelets at plasma exposures >300 nmol/L, >75% tumoral GLS inhibition, and significant increase in circulating glutamine. RP2D was defined at 800 mg twice-daily. Disease control rate (DCR) was 43% across expansion cohorts (overall response rate 5%, DCR 50% in renal cell carcinoma). Conclusions: Telaglenastat is safe, with a favorable PK/PD profile and signal of antitumor activity, supporting further clinical development.

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Harding, J. J., Telli, M., Munster, P., Voss, M. H., Infante, J. R., DeMichele, A., … Meric-Bernstam, F. (2021). A phase I dose-escalation and expansion study of telaglenastat in patients with advanced or metastatic solid tumors. Clinical Cancer Research, 27(18), 4994–5003. https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-21-1204

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