SX-682

A Phase 1, Open-Label, Dose-Escalation With Expansion Study of SX-682 Alone and in Combination With Oral or Intravenous Decitabine in Subjects With Myelodysplastic Syndrome

What's the purpose of the trial?

This study will determine the safety profile, maximum tolerated dose (MTD), dose-limiting toxicities (DLT), and recommended Phase 2 dose (RP2D) of SX-682 in the treatment of patients with Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS).
Trial status

Accepting patients

Phase
Phase 1
Enrollment
151
Last Updated
2 weeks ago
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Participating Centers

There are 6 centers participating in this trial. Enter a location below to find the closest center.

Experimental Treatments

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  • Decitabine is a type of chemotherapy called a hypomethylating agent that interferes with the growth and spread of cancer cells in the body. 
  • SX-682 is an oral, small molecule CXCR1 and CXCR2 inhibitor being studied for use in several different cancers.

Arms / Cohorts

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Accepting patients

Dose Escalation: SX-682

Accepting patients

Dose Expansion: SX-682

Accepting patients

Dose Expansion: SX-682

Published Results

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Phase 1 Results of the First-in-Class CXCR1/2 Inhibitor SX-682 in Patients with Hypomethylating Agent Failure Myelodysplastic Syndromes

17 MDS pts received SX-682 (median 1 prior therapies; range 1-4) with 6 pts in the 200 mg cohort, 3 pts in each of the 25, 50 and 100 cohorts and 2 pts in the 400 mg cohort (Table). Median age was 76, and pts were low (n=1), intermediate-1 (n=10), intermediate-2 (n=5) and high (n=1) risk by the International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS). All pts were transfusion-dependent and all had failed prior HMA and 24% lenalidomide. Steady-state PK exhibits increasing drug plasma concentration with dose comparable to pts with solid tumors. The ANC PD marker exhibited a dose-dependent decrease from baseline (ΔANC) that plateaued in the 200 and 400 mg dose cohorts consistent with maximum receptor inhibition (Table). Marrow MDSCs and LSCs were reduced after initiation of SX-682. SX-682 was well-tolerated with no maximally tolerated dose and no pt discontinued treatment for adverse events. Treatment-emergent adverse events > grade 3 were most common in the 200 and 400 mg dose cohorts, and those related to neutrophils are consistent with being related to SX-682. Effects on neutrophils reversed on cessation of drug dosing. There was a dose-dependent increase in overall response rate (ORR) from 0% at 25 mg BID to 50% at 200 mg BID consistent with the observed clinical benefit being related to CXCR1/2 inhibition by SX-682 (Table). Four of the five responders had mutant genes (MGs) involving splicing factors (60% of responders; SF3B1, SRSF2) and/or epigenetic regulation (60% of responders; TET2, ASXL1, IDH2). Across all dose cohorts, 8 of 17 (47%) pts had a reduction in marrow blasts after initiating SX-682 (Figure). The 200 mg dose yielded the most rapid and deep reduction in blasts with 2 of 6 pts (33%) achieving a marrow complete remission (mCR) in keeping with this dose providing maximum receptor inhibition. There was hematologic improvement (HI) in 3 pts with one having a durable near-CR response (on SX-682 >500 days) consisting of trilineage HI (hemoglobin > 10 g/dL) and transfusion independence for over 4 months (pt required 16 transfusions in the 7 weeks before starting SX-682 therapy). Based on ANC PD, ORR and marrow blast responses, the 200 mg BID dose was selected for the expansion phase of the trial.

2 years ago Read more

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