CTNI-68. FIREFLY-1 (PNOC026): PHASE 2 STUDY OF PAN-RAF INHIBITOR TOVORAFENIB IN PEDIATRIC AND YOUNG ADULT PATIENTS WITH RAF-ALTERED RECURRENT OR PROGRESSIVE LOW-GRADE GLIOMA OR ADVANCED SOLID TUMORS

Lindsay Kilburn(Children's National), Daniel Landi(Duke Medical Center), Sarah Leary(Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders), David S. Ziegler(Sydney Children's Hospital), Patricia Baxter(Baylor College of Medicine), Andrea Franson(University of Michigan), Geoffrey McCowage(Sydney Children’s Hospitals Network), Angela J. Waanders(Lurie Children's Hospital), Jasper van der Lugt(Princess Máxima Center), Michal Oren(Sheba Medical Center), Nicolas U. Gerber(University Children's Hospital Zurich), Nicholas G. Gottardo(Princess Margaret Hospital for Children), Dong‐Anh Khuong‐Quang(Royal Children's Hospital), Karsten Nysom(Rigshospitalet), Simon Bailey(Newcastle University), Pablo Hernáiz Driever(Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin), Sébastien Perreault(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Sainte-Justine), Olaf Witt(Hopp Children's Cancer Center Heidelberg), Seungmin Hahn(Yonsei University), Darren Hargrave(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Tim Hassall(Children's Health Queensland Hospital and Health Service), Nada Jabado(McGill University Health Centre), Hyoung Jin Kang(Seoul National University Children's Hospital), Valérie Larouche(Centre hospitalier universitaire de Québec), Helen Toledano(Schneider Children's Medical Center), Cassie Kline(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Mohamed S Abdelbaki(Washington University in St. Louis), Susan Chi(Dana-Farber/Boston Children's Cancer and Blood Disorders Center), Sharon L. Gardner(NYU Langone Health), Nicholas Whipple(University of Utah), Sabine Mueller(University of California, San Francisco), Samuel C. Blackman(NGM Biopharmaceuticals (United States)), Xin Zhao(NGM Biopharmaceuticals (United States)), Daniel Da Costa(NGM Biopharmaceuticals (United States)), Michael C. Cox(NGM Biopharmaceuticals (United States)), Roger Packer(Children's National), Jordan R. Hansford(Royal Children's Hospital)
Neuro-Oncology
November 1, 2022
Cited by 13Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND RAF alterations are oncogenic drivers found in most pediatric low-grade gliomas (LGGs). Tovorafenib is an investigational, oral, selective, CNS-penetrant, small molecule, type II pan‑RAF inhibitor. METHODS FIREFLY-1 (NCT04775485) is a multicenter phase 2 study evaluating the safety and efficacy of tovorafenib monotherapy. Registrational arm 1 enrolled patients with recurrent/progressive LGG harboring an activating BRAF alteration. Patients aged 6 months–25 years who progressed following ≥ 1 prior line of systemic therapy were eligible. Tovorafenib 420 mg/m2 (≤ 600 mg) was administered weekly (tablet or liquid suspension formulation) until progression or for ≥ 26, 28-day cycles. The primary endpoint (arm 1) was overall response rate, as defined by RANO criteria, per independent review. RESULTS As of April 14, 2022, 25 patients were enrolled to arm 1 and had ≥ 6 months of follow-up. Median age at enrollment was 8 years (range 3–18). Most patients had astrocytomas (92%), 48% with optic pathway involvement. Patients were heavily pretreated (56% with ≥ 3 prior lines of therapy), and 72% previously received MAPK pathway-targeted agents. Tumors harbored BRAF fusions (84%) or BRAF V600E mutations (16%). Per independent assessment, partial responses (1 unconfirmed) were seen in 14 (64%) of 22 evaluable patients, with 6 additional patients having stable disease, and a clinical benefit rate of 91%. Responses were achieved in tumors with BRAF fusions and V600E mutations. Most treatment-emergent adverse events (AEs) were grade 1 or 2 (96%). The most common grade ≥ 3 AEs were anemia (12%), vomiting, increased blood creatinine phosphokinase and maculopapular rash (8% each). Seven patients (28%) required dose modification for treatment-related AEs; no patients discontinued tovorafenib due to AEs. Updated results, including efficacy per RAPNO assessments will be presented. CONCLUSIONS Tovorafenib was generally well tolerated and showed encouraging evidence of antitumor activity in children with pretreated BRAF-altered LGG.


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