Abstract
BACKGROUND
mTOR activation is a mechanism of resistance in CDK4/6 targeting. We evaluated tumor pharmacokinetics (PK) and tumor pharmacodynamics (PD) of combined CDK4/6 and mTOR inhibition in recurrent high-grade glioma (HGG) patients.
METHODS
Recurrent HGG patients with (1) intact RB, (2) CDKN2A/B deletion or CDK4/6 amplification, and (3) PTEN loss or PIK3CA mutations receive five days of presurgical ribociclib plus everolimus prior to resection at 2, 8 or 24 hours after the final dose. Beginning at 400mg QD ribociclib plus 2.5mg QD everolimus, six dose-escalations summit at 600mg QD plus 60mg QW. Gadolinium [Gd]-enhancing and nonenhancing tumor regions, CSF, and plasma are collected. Total and unbound drug concentrations are determined using validated LC-MS/MS methods. RB and S6 phosphorylation are compared to matched archival tissue. To select patients for a therapeutic expansion phase of combined drug therapy, the protocol includes a PK ‘trigger’ (i.e., for each drug, unbound concentration in Gd-nonenhancing tumor > 5-fold biochemical IC50) and a PD ‘trigger’ (i.e., for each tumor, > 30% decrease in pRB and pS6).
RESULTS
21 patients with WHO Grade III (n=2) and IV (n=19) gliomas were enrolled into the Phase 0 component of the study. No dose-limiting toxicities were observed. In Gd-nonenhancing tumor regions, the median unbound concentration of ribociclib was 719 nM, whereas unbound everolimus tumor concentrations were undetectable. Across all dose-levels, 62% (13/21) and 22% (5/21) of tumors demonstrated decreased tumor RB and S6 phosphorylation, respectively. Tumor proliferation (MIB-1) was decreased in 67% (14/21) of all patients. No patients qualified for the therapeutic expansion phase.
CONCLUSION
In adult HGG, ribociclib achieves pharmacologically-relevant concentrations in Gd-nonenhancing tumor whereas everolimus exhibits no meaningful tumor penetration. These findings support further clinical development of ribociclib, but not everolimus, for the treatment of high-grade glioma patients.