MTL-CEBPA, a small activating RNA therapeutic upregulating C/EBP-α, in patients with advanced liver cancer: a first-in-human, multicenter, open-label, phase I trial

D Sarker, R Plummer, T Meyer, MH Sodergren… - Clinical cancer …, 2020 - AACR
D Sarker, R Plummer, T Meyer, MH Sodergren, B Basu, CE Chee, KW Huang, DH Palmer…
Clinical cancer research, 2020AACR
Abstract Purpose: Transcription factor C/EBP-α (CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein alpha)
acts as a master regulator of hepatic and myeloid functions and multiple oncogenic
processes. MTL-CEBPA is a first-in-class small activating RNA oligonucleotide drug that
upregulates C/EBP-α. Patients and Methods: We conducted a phase I, open-label, dose-
escalation trial of MTL-CEBPA in adults with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with
cirrhosis, or resulting from nonalcoholic steatohepatitis or with liver metastases. Patients …
Purpose
Transcription factor C/EBP-α (CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein alpha) acts as a master regulator of hepatic and myeloid functions and multiple oncogenic processes. MTL-CEBPA is a first-in-class small activating RNA oligonucleotide drug that upregulates C/EBP-α.
Patients and Methods
We conducted a phase I, open-label, dose-escalation trial of MTL-CEBPA in adults with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with cirrhosis, or resulting from nonalcoholic steatohepatitis or with liver metastases. Patients received intravenous MTL-CEBPA once a week for 3 weeks followed by a rest period of 1 week per treatment cycle in the dose-escalation phase (3+3 design).
Results
Thirty-eight participants have been treated across six dose levels (28–160 mg/m2) and three dosing schedules. Thirty-four patients were evaluable for safety endpoints at 28 days. MTL-CEBPA treatment–related adverse events were not associated with dose, and no maximum dose was reached across the three schedules evaluated. Grade 3 treatment-related adverse events occurred in nine (24%) patients. In 24 patients with HCC evaluable for efficacy, an objective tumor response was achieved in one patient [4%; partial response (PR) for over 2 years] and stable disease (SD) in 12 (50%). After discontinuation of MTL-CEBPA, seven patients were treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs); three patients had a complete response with one further PR and two with SD.
Conclusions
MTL-CEBPA is the first saRNA in clinical trials and demonstrates an acceptable safety profile and potential synergistic efficacy with TKIs in HCC. These encouraging phase I data validate targeting of C/EBP-α and have prompted MTL-CEBPA + sorafenib combination studies in HCC.
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