378 A first in-human, multicenter, open-label, dose-finding phase 1 study of the immune stimulator antibody conjugate NJH395 in patients with nonbreast HER2+ advanced malignancies

NJH395 is a first-in-class immune stimulator antibody conjugate (ISAC) consisting of a toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7) agonist conjugated to an anti-HER2 antibody. Antibody-mediated delivery of TLR7 may limit systemic toxicities previously seen with TLR agonists, while enhancing long-lasting antitumor immune response. In preclinical studies, NJH395 showed promising activity in HER2 expressing xenograft mouse models, and demonstrated immunogenicity and cytokine release in mice and nonhuman primates.This phase 1, first-in-human, open-label, multicenter study (NCT03696771) is evaluating the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and preliminary efficacy of NJH395 in patients with nonbreast HER2+ advanced malignancies. The study design includes two parts: single-ascending dose (SAD), followed by multiple-ascending dose. Primary endpoint is safety; key secondary endpoints include assessment of pharmacokinetics, immunogenicity, and overall response rate. Tumor response was evaluated 3 weeks after treatment in SAD. Evaluation of pharmacodynamic markers including tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes is the key exploratory objective.Here, we report the results of the SAD part of this phase 1 study. As of July 01, 2020, 18 patients (10 males, 8 females; median age, 52.5 years [range, 42–74 years]) were enrolled in 5 dose cohorts (0.1–1.6 mg/kg). The tumor types included HER2+ colorectal cancer (N=11), gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma (N=2), non–small cell lung cancer (N=1), nasopharynx adenocarcinoma (N=1), pancreatic adenocarcinoma (N=1), bladder cancer (N=1), and small intestine adenocarcinoma (N=1). Seventeen patients reported 124 treatment-related adverse events. The most common (occurring in ≥ 20%) adverse events (AEs) of any grade (G), regardless of study drug relationship were cytokine release syndrome (55.6%, G ≤ 2), pyrexia (44.4%), nausea (44.4%), vomiting (33.3%), headache (33.3%), increased aspartate aminotransferase (AST, 33.3%), increased alanine aminotransferase (ALT, 27.8%), and lymphopenia/lymphocyte count decrease (27.8%). The most common ≥ G3 AEs (occurring in ≥ 10%) were lymphopenia/lymphocyte count decrease (27.8%) and increased AST (11.1%). Five dose-limiting toxicities, all G3, were reported in 3 patients: 2 cases of AST increase (1 at 0.2 mg/kg; 1 at 1.6 mg/kg), 1 ALT increase (1.6 mg/kg), 1 aseptic meningitis (1.6 mg/kg), and 1 meningism (1.6 mg/kg). No complete/partial response was seen; 9 patients had stable disease by RECIST v1.1 at 3 weeks post treatment. An increase in CD8-positive T-cells was detected in on-treatment tumor biopsies in 5 patients. Pharmacokinetics showed a greater than dose proportional exposure of NJH395; anti-drug antibodies were detected in all tested patients (14/14).Single dosing of NJH395 showed significant but manageable toxicities in patients with nonbreast HER2+ advanced malignancies. Biomarker analysis is ongoing.The authors thank all patients who participated in the study. The authors acknowledge Kavita Garg, PhD of Novartis Healthcare Pvt Ltd for providing medical editorial assistance with this abstract.ClinicalTrials. gov Identifier: NCT03696771The study was performed in accordance with ethical principles of the declaration of Helsinki and good clinical practice guidelines. The protocol and its amendments were approved by institutional review boards of each participating site.Written informed consent was obtained from each patient prior to enrolment in the study.