A Phase I study of indoximod in patients with advanced malignancies

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Abstract

Purpose: Indoximod is an oral inhibitor of the indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase pathway, which causes tumor-mediated immunosuppression. Primary endpoints were maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and toxicity for indoximod in patients with advanced solid tumors. Secondary endpoints included response rates, pharmacokinetics, and immune correlates. Experimental Design: Our 3+3 phase I trial comprised 10 dose levels (200, 300, 400, 600, and 800 mg once/day; 600, 800, 1200, 1600, and 2000 mg twice/day). Inclusion criteria were measurable metastatic solid malignancy, age =18 years, and adequate organ/marrow function. Exclusion criteria were chemotherapy = 3 weeks prior, untreated brain metastases, autoimmune disease, or malabsorption. Results: In 48 patients, MTD was not reached at 2000 mg twice/day. At 200 mg once/day, 3 patients previously treated with checkpoint inhibitors developed hypophysitis. Five patients showed stable disease >6 months. Indoximod plasma AUC and Cmax plateaued above 1200mg. Cmax (~12 μM at 2000 mg twice/day) occurred at 2.9 hours, and half-life was 10.5 hours. C reactive protein (CRP) levels increased across multiple dose levels. Conclusions: Indoximod was safe at doses up to 2000 mg orally twice/day. Best response was stable disease >6 months in 5 patients. Induction of hypophysitis, increased tumor antigen autoantibodies and CRP levels were observed.

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Soliman, H. H., Minton, S. E., Han, H. S., Ismail-Khan, R., Neuger, A., Khambati, F., … Antonia, S. J. (2016). A Phase I study of indoximod in patients with advanced malignancies. Oncotarget, 7(16), 22928–22938. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.8216

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