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High-Dose Intermittent Treatment with the Multikinase Inhibitor Sunitinib Leads to High Intra-Tumor Drug Exposure in Patients with Advanced Solid Tumors

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Simple Summary Multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) provide clinical benefit in patients with cancer when daily dosed to continuously inhibit their designated targets. Alternative dosing strategies pursuing higher tumor drug… Click to show full abstract

Simple Summary Multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) provide clinical benefit in patients with cancer when daily dosed to continuously inhibit their designated targets. Alternative dosing strategies pursuing higher tumor drug concentrations may improve their benefit by inhibiting relevant off-target kinase activity. We studied the tumor-drug exposure in a previously established safe and feasible high-dose intermittent treatment strategy of the multikinase inhibitor sunitinib in relation to its treatment benefit. Abstract Patients with advanced cancer refractory to standard treatment were treated with sunitinib at a dose of 300 mg once every week (Q1W) or 700 mg once every two weeks (Q2W). Tumor, skin and plasma concentrations were measured and immunohistochemical staining for tumor cell proliferation (TCP), microvessel density (MVD) and T-cell infiltration was performed on tumor biopsies before and after 17 days of treatment. Oral administration of 300 mg sunitinib Q1W or 700 mg Q2W resulted in 19-fold (range 5–35×) and 37-fold higher (range 10–88×) tumor drug concentrations compared to parallel maximum plasma drug concentrations, respectively. Patients with higher tumor sunitinib concentrations had favorable progression-free and overall survival than those with lower concentrations (p = 0.046 and 0.024, respectively). In addition, immunohistochemistry of tumor biopsies revealed an induction of T-cell infiltration upon treatment. These findings provide pharmacological and biological insights in the clinical benefit from high-dose intermittent sunitinib treatment. It emphasizes the potential benefit from reaching higher tumor drug concentrations and the value of measuring TKI tumor- over plasma-concentrations. The finding that reaching higher tumor drug concentrations provides most clinical benefit in patients with treatment refractory malignancies indicates that the inhibitory potency of sunitinib may be enforced by a high-dose intermittent treatment schedule. These results provide proof of concept for testing other clinically available multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors in a high-dose intermittent treatment schedule.

Keywords: tumor drug; high dose; treatment; tumor; dose intermittent

Journal Title: Cancers
Year Published: 2022

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