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Poster session 17

718TiP - DEKA-1 a dose-finding phase I trial: Observing safety and biomarkers using DK210 (EGFR) for inoperable locally advanced and/or metastatic EGFR+ tumors with progressive disease failing systemic therapy

Date

21 Oct 2023

Session

Poster session 17

Topics

Clinical Research;  Tumour Immunology;  Targeted Therapy;  Immunotherapy

Tumour Site

Presenters

Elizabeth Moser

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2023) 34 (suppl_2): S458-S497. 10.1016/S0923-7534(23)01936-1

Authors

E. Moser1, M. Salkeni2, A. Marabelle3, D. Kientop4, J. mumm5

Author affiliations

  • 1 Clinical, Deka Biosciences, 20876 - Germantown/US
  • 2 Medical Oncology, NEXT OncologyTM, 22031 - Fairfax/US
  • 3 Drug Development Department, Institut Gustave Roussy, 94805 - Villejuif/FR
  • 4 Clinical, DEKA Biosciences, 20876 - Germantown/US
  • 5 Preclinical, DEKA Biosciences, Inc., 20876 - Germantown/US

Resources

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Abstract 718TiP

Background

Both interleukin-2 (IL-2) and interleukin-10 (IL-10) have been extensively studied for their stimulatory function on T cells and their potential to obtain sustainable tumor control in RCC, melanoma, lung, and pancreatic cancer as monotherapy, as well as combination with PD-1 blockers, radiation, and chemotherapy. While approved, IL-2 retains significant toxicity, preventing its widespread use. The significant efforts undertaken to uncouple IL-2 toxicity from its anti-tumor function have been unsuccessful and early phase clinical safety observed with PEGylated IL-10 was not met in a blinded phase 3 trial. Deka Biosciences has engineered a novel molecule coupling wild-type IL-2 to a high affinity variant of Epstein Barr Viral (EBV) IL-10 via a scaffold (scFv) that binds to epidermal growth factor receptors (EGFR). This patented molecule, termed DK210 (EGFR), is retained at high levels within the tumor microenvironment for days after dosing. In addition to overlapping and non-redundant anti-tumor function, IL-10 reduces IL-2 mediated cytokine release syndrome risks and inhibits IL-2 mediated T regulatory cell proliferation.

Trial design

DK210 (EGFR) is being evaluated in an open-label, dose-escalation (phase 1) study with 5 (0.025-0.3 mg/kg) monotherapy dose levels, and (expansion cohorts) in combination with PD-1 blockers, or radiation or chemotherapy in patients with advanced solid tumors overexpressing EGFR. Key eligibility criteria include: 1) confirmed progressive disease on at least one line of systemic treatment, 2) EGFR overexpression or amplification documented in histology reports, 3) at least a 4 week or 5 half-lives window since last treatment, and 4) excluding subjects with long QT syndrome, multiple myeloma, multiple sclerosis, myasthenia gravis or uncontrolled infectious, psychiatric, neurologic, or cancer disease. Plasma and tissue samples will be investigated for pharmacodynamic and predictive biomarkers and genetic signatures associated with IFN-gamma secretion, aiming to select subjects for treatment in phase 2.

Clinical trial identification

NCT05704985.

Editorial acknowledgement

Legal entity responsible for the study

Deka Biosciences Inc.

Funding

Deka Biosciences Inc.

Disclosure

E. Moser, D. Kientop, J. Mumm: Financial Interests, Personal, Full or part-time Employment: Deka Biosciences. A. Marabelle: Financial Interests, Personal, Advisory Board: Deka Biosciences. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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