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Afatinib in paediatric patients with recurrent/refractory ErbB-dysregulated tumours: Results of a phase I/expansion trial

Birgit Geoerger*, Lynley V Marshall, Karsten Nysom, Guy Makin, Eric Bouffet, Anne-Sophie Defachelles, Loredana Amoroso, Isabelle Aerts, Pierre Leblond, Paulette Barahona, Kim Van-Vlerken, Eric Fu, Flavio Solca, Robert M Lorence, David S Ziegler

*Corresponding author for this work
8 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

AIM: This phase I/expansion study assessed the safety, pharmacokinetics and preliminary antitumor activity of afatinib in paediatric patients with cancer.

METHODS: The dose-finding part enroled patients (2-<18 years) with recurrent/refractory tumours. Patients received 18 or 23 mg/m2/d afatinib orally (tablet or solution) in 28-d cycles. In the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) expansion, eligible patients (1-<18 years) had tumours fulfilling ≥2 of the following criteria in the pre-screening: EGFR amplification; HER2 amplification; EGFR membrane staining (H-score>150); HER2 membrane staining (H-score>0). The primary end-points were dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs), afatinib exposure, and objective response.

RESULTS: Of 564 patients pre-screened, 536 patients had biomarker data and 63 (12%) fulfilled ≥2 EGFR/HER2 criteria required for inclusion in the expansion part. A total of 56 patients were treated (17 in the dose-finding and 39 in the expansion part). DLTs were observed in one of six MTD-evaluable patients receiving 18 mg/m²/d and in two of five MTD-evaluable patients receiving 23 mg/m²/d; 18 mg/m²/d was defined as the MTD. There were no new safety signals. Pharmacokinetics confirmed exposure consistent with the approved dose in adults. One partial response (-81% per Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology) was observed in a patient with a glioneuronal tumour harbouring a CLIP2::EGFR fusion; unconfirmed partial responses were observed in two patients. In total, 25% of patients experienced objective response or stable disease (95% confidence interval: 14-38).

CONCLUSION: Targetable EGFR/HER2 drivers are rare in paediatric cancers. Treatment with afatinib led to a durable response (>3 years) in one patient with a glioneuronal tumour with CLIP2::EGFR fusion.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean journal of cancer (Oxford, England : 1990)
Volume188
Pages (from-to)8-19
Number of pages12
ISSN0959-8049
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2023

Keywords

  • Afatinib
  • EGFR
  • EGFR::CLIP2 fusion
  • HER2
  • Paediatric cancer

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