Rapid Readout: Safety and Efficacy of Menin Inhibition in Patients with MLL-Rearranged and NPM1 Mutant Acute Leukemia: SNDX-5613
Eytan Stein, MD, discusses the AUGMENT-101 trial and menin inhibition in patients with MLL-rearranged and NPM1 mutant acute leukemia, which was presented at the 63rd ASH Annual Meeting in 2021.
OncLive® Rapid Readout from Safety and Efficacy of Menin Inhibition in Patients with MLL-Rearranged and NPM1 Mutant Acute Leukemia: SNDX-5613
Segment Description: Eytan Stein, MD, discusses the AUGMENT-101 trial and menin inhibition in patients with MLL-rearranged and NPM1 mutant acute leukemia, which was presented at the 63rd ASH Annual Meeting in 2021. (Abstract 699)
Segment Body Content:
Translocations involving the MLL gene on chromosome 11q23 result in fusions with ≥10 partner genes that act as drivers in relatively chemotherapy resistant MLL-rearranged (MLLr) leukemias. These chimeric proteins form part of protein complexes that aberrantly upregulate transcription of the leukemogenic HOX and MEIS1 genes. Menin is a key member of the complex and localizes the complex to chromatin.
Similarly, in NPM1 mutant (mNPM1) AML, the interaction between wild-type MLL and menin leads to a HOX and MEIS1-mediated leukemogenic transcriptional program. In preclinical models of MLLr and mNPM1 leukemias, inhibition of the interaction between MLL and menin downregulates HOX and MEIS1 transcription and reverses leukemogenesis (Uckelmann 2020; Krivstov 2019).
SNDX-5613 (5613) is a potent, selective protein-protein interaction inhibitor of menin being evaluated in the AUGMENT-101 study, a first-in-human (FIH), Phase 1/2 study in pts with R/R acute leukemia. Here, we report the results of the completed, Phase 1 component.
Methods
The study includes 2 parallel dose-escalation cohorts: patients not taking (Arm A) or taking (Arm B) strong CYP3A4 inhibitors.
An early amendment restricted enrollment to MLLr or mNPM1 leukemias.
Dose escalation used a “rolling 6” design with expansion at efficacious doses. 5613 is dosed orally q12h in continuous 28-day cycles. Dose levels evaluated in Arm A were 113 (n=1), 226 (n=6), 276 (n=10), and 339 mg (n=8), and in Arm B 113 (n=16), 163 (n=6), and 226 mg (n=7). Primary objectives of Phase 1 were to determine the safety, MTD, recommended Phase 2 dose (RP2D), and PK profile of 5613.
Exploratory endpoints included antileukemic activity and pharmacodynamics of 5613.
Results
As of June 29, 2021, 54 patients had received at least 1 dose of 5613; 13 patients remained on treatment. The median age was 49 years; 82% (n=44) of patients had AML; 65% (n=35) had MLLr leukemia, and 19% (n=10) had mNPM1 leukemia. Patients had a median of 3 prior therapies (range, 1-12); 57% and 44% had prior venetoclax or transplant, respectively; 59% of patients had not responded to their most recent line of therapy.
5613 exhibited dose-proportional PK, and exposure increased ~2-3–fold when given with a strong CYP3A4 inhibitor. Measurement of target occupancy and gene expression showed that 5613 disrupted menin binding to chromatin and decreased leukemogenic gene expression consistent with the established mechanism of action.
The only DLTs were Grade 3 prolonged QTc; all events were clinically asymptomatic. The MTD was 276 mg q12h in Arm A and 163 mg q12h in Arm B; 2 doses in each arm met the protocol-defined criteria (safety, percentage of planned dose intensity, and pharmacokinetic exposure) for a RP2D. The frequency of Grade 3 prolonged QTc at these doses was 8% (3/38).
No ventricular arrhythmias were reported, and no patients discontinued 5613 due to a treatment-related event. Other common (>10%) treatment-related AE (TRAE) were nausea (n=12; 22%), vomiting (n=9; 17%), differentiation syndrome (n=8; 15%), and diarrhea (n=6;11%).
In the 45 patients with MLLr or mNPM1 leukemias, responses were seen in both Arms A and B and at multiple dose levels. The composite CR (CRc: CR+CRh+CRp+CRi/MLFS) rate was 44% (20/45 patients). Among patients with MLLr leukemia, the CRc rate was 49% (17/35 patients), and in patients with mNPM1 leukemia, the CRc rate was 30% (3/10 patients); 14/20 (70%) patients with CRc achieved MRD negativity assessed locally by flow cytometry or PCR.
Of the 22 patients who received prior transplant, 10 (45%) achieved CRc. The CR/CRh rate was 22% (10/45) in patients with MLLr or mNPM1 leukemia. Median time to CR/CRh was 2 months (mo).
With a median follow-up of 3.2 mo, the median duration of response (DoR) for patients achieving a CR/CRh was 5.2 mo. Responding patients were censored at the time they discontinued the study to proceed to an allogeneic stem cell transplant (n=6).
Consistent with the proposed preclinical mechanism of menin inhibition, the 9 patients with wild-type MLL and NPM1 did not respond to 5613.
Conclusions
In this FIH Phase 1 study, SNDX-5613 demonstrates an acceptable safety profile and promising antileukemic activity in patients with heavily pretreated R/R MLLr and mNPM1 acute leukemia. Two dose levels in each arm met the prespecified criteria for RP2D. Phase 2 expansion includes cohorts of patients with MLLr AML, MLLr ALL, and mNPM1 AML.