Since 2003, the US Food and Drug Administration approval of bortezomib, a proteasome inhibitor, has changed the management of hematologic malignancies and dramatically improved outcomes for patients with multiple myeloma and mantle cell lymphoma. Since that time, two additional proteasome inhibitors (carfilzomib and ixazomib) have been approved, with other agents and combinations currently under investigation. Proteasomes degrade ubiquitinated proteins or substrates through the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway, a pathway that is utilized in multiple myeloma because of the high protein turnover with immunoglobulin production. Proteasome inhibitors exploit dependence on this pathway, halting protein degradation that ultimately results in apoptosis and cell death. Here we will discuss the structure of the proteasome and the mechanisms of action for proteasome inhibitors to further understand their role in hematologic malignancies.
1023 Background: Chemotherapy with immune checkpoint inhibitors can improve outcomes vs chemotherapy alone in patients (pts) with metastatic TNBC; however, many still have poor clinical outcomes. BEGONIA is an ongoing 2 part, multicenter, multiarm, open-label platform study evaluating safety and efficacy of D (anti–PD-L1)+P and D±P combined with novel therapies as first-line (1L) treatment for metastatic TNBC (NCT03742102). We report initial results from Part 1 of Arm 1, D+P, and Arm 6, D+T-DXd, an antibody-drug conjugate comprising an anti-HER2 antibody, tetrapeptide-based cleavable linker, and topoisomerase I inhibitor payload. Methods: Eligible pts had untreated unresectable locally advanced or metastatic TNBC. Pts with HER2-low–expressing tumors (IHC 2+/ISH–, IHC 1+/ISH–, or IHC 1+/ISH untested) per local testing were assigned to the D+T-DXd arm. Pts received D (1500 mg IV Q4W)+P (90 mg/m2 IV Day 1, 8, 15 Q4W) in Arm 1 and D (1120 mg IV)+T-DXd (5.4 mg/kg IV) Q3W in Arm 6, until progression or unacceptable toxicity. Primary objectives are safety and tolerability. Secondary endpoints include objective response rate (ORR), duration of response (DoR), and progression-free survival (PFS). Tumors were assessed Q8W (D+P) or Q6W (D+T-DXd). The first 6 pts treated with D+T-DXd were evaluated for dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs), with additional pts enrolled if D+T-DXd was tolerated. Study arms are noncomparable due to differing eligibility criteria, treatments, and data maturity. Results: Arm 1 D+P (data cutoff Sep 2020): 23 pts received D+P (7 ongoing); 2 discontinued D+P due to AEs. Median follow-up time was 16.6 (range 8.5–19.8) mos. Any Grade 3/4 AEs and SAEs were experienced by 10 (44%) and 1 (4%) pts, respectively. D dose was delayed for 7 (30%) pts. Confirmed ORR was 13/23 (57%) with 54% of those remaining in response at 12 mos (median DoR not reached). Median PFS was 7.3 (95% CI 5.4–13.8) mos in the D+P arm. Arm 6 D+T-DXd (data cutoff Nov 2020): 11 pts received D+T-DXd to date (all ongoing). Median follow-up time was 2.3 (0–6) mos. Any Grade 3/4 AEs and SAEs were experienced by 4 (36%) and 1 (9%) pts, respectively. Pts who received D+T-DXd had no DLTs and 1 had a Grade 1 troponin increase. D dose was delayed and T-DXd dose reduced for 2 (18%) pts each. Confirmed ORR was 4/4 (100%; only 4 pts had the opportunity to complete 2 on-treatment disease assessments) with all 4 remaining in response at data cutoff (median DoR not reached). Conclusions: D+P demonstrated a tolerable safety profile and response rate as expected for a 1L TNBC IO/taxane combination. D+T-DXd showed promising early safety and efficacy in 1L HER2-low–expressing TNBC; pt evaluation and enrollment for D+T-DXd are ongoing. D+T-DXd data will be updated and the impact of PD-L1 expression in both arms will be examined. Clinical trial information: NCT03742102 .
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