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Does Cabozantinib Reduce Tumor Volume and Pain in Patients With NF1?


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Results of a phase II trial showed that cabozantinib, a multiple tyrosine kinase receptor inhibitor, reduces tumor volume and pain in patients with the genetic disorder neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1). These findings were published by Fisher et al in Nature Medicine.

“This is the second class of drugs to demonstrate a very promising response rate for [patients with] NF1 with these tumors,” said first author Michael J. Fisher, MD, Chief of the Section of Neuro-Oncology and Director of the Neurofibromatosis Program at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, and Group Chair for the NF Clinical Trials Consortium, which includes 25 sites developing innovative clinical trials for complications of NF1. “Collectively, the data presented in this study illustrate a true bench-to-bedside approach, coordinating translational and clinical efforts to advance targeted therapies for a rare disease like NF1.”

More About NF1

NF1 is a rare tumor predisposition syndrome, affecting approximately 1 in 3,000 people worldwide. The condition involves the proliferation of tumors throughout the central and peripheral nervous system. One of the most prevalent type of tumors in NF1 are plexiform neurofibromas, multicellular tumors composed of tumorigenic Schwann cells, fibroblasts, perineural cells, macrophages, mast cells, and secreted collagen. The tumors arise within nerves; affect up to half of patients with NF1; grow rapidly during childhood; and can lead to motor and sensory dysfunction, pain, and disfigurement. When the tumors impinge on vital structures like the airway or the spinal cord, they can be life-threatening, and although the tumors are not malignant, they can become so over time.

Since chemotherapy and radiation are ineffective at treating these tumors, surgery is the current standard of care. However, given that the tumors can be intertwined with nerves and other vital structures, surgery is often not possible. Recent studies have shown that a MEK inhibitor called selumetinib can be an effective treatment in some children with NF1-related plexiform neurofibromas, but not all patients respond to this treatment.

KEY POINTS

  • Of the 19 patients studied for response, 8 had a partial response and 11 had stable disease after 12 rounds of treatment.
  • No patient experienced disease progression while participating in the trial.
  • The eight patients who had a partial response to treatment also reported a significant reduction in tumor pain intensity and pain interference in daily life.

Study Background

Based on preclinical studies of cabozantinib, which targets both the tumorigenic Schwann cells in plexiform neurofibromas as well as the complex tumor microenvironment, the researchers enrolled patients in a single arm, multicenter phase II clinical trial. Twenty-three patients between the ages of 16 and 34 enrolled in the trial; 21 were evaluable for drug toxicity and 19 were evaluable for their response to the treatment.

Findings

Of the 19 patients studied for response, 8 (42%) had a partial response—defined as having greater than a 20% decrease in tumor volume—and 11 had stable disease after 12 rounds of treatment. No patient experienced disease progression while participating in the trial. The eight patients who had a partial response to treatment also reported a significant reduction in tumor pain intensity and pain interference in daily life.

Patients enrolled in the trial reported several adverse events, including diarrhea, nausea, asymptomatic hypothyroidism, fatigue, and palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia. However, none of the side effects were reported as being severe.

Based on the benefit of cabozantinib demonstrated in this study, the NF Clinical Trials Consortium opened a pediatric cohort as well, enrolling patients ages 3 to 15. Enrollment is complete, and the study is ongoing.

“It's incredibly exciting that we now have two classes of drugs that result in tumor responses, given that we had no promising agents only a few years ago,” said Dr. Fisher. “However, despite this excitement, neither cabozantinib nor MEK inhibitors shrink all tumors or make them go away completely. Therefore, we are building on these results as well as ongoing laboratory studies and are planning future exploration of combination therapies, so that we can further improve outcomes for these patients with these debilitating and life-threatening tumors.”

Disclosure: For full disclosures of the study authors, visit nature.com.

The content in this post has not been reviewed by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Inc. (ASCO®) and does not necessarily reflect the ideas and opinions of ASCO®.
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