AI Article Synopsis

  • Recurrent brain tumors are a major cause of cancer-related deaths in children, and the study focused on indoximod, which inhibits a metabolic checkpoint called IDO and may enhance anti-tumor immunity post-chemotherapy.
  • A phase I trial was conducted with 81 pediatric patients, using indoximod in combination with temozolomide or radiation, to assess its safety and determine the appropriate dosage.
  • Results showed a median overall survival of 13.3 months for recurrent cases, with patients who responded to treatment experiencing significantly longer survival, and the findings indicate potential for further trials to evaluate indoximod's effectiveness in treating pediatric brain tumors.

Article Abstract

Background: Recurrent brain tumors are the leading cause of cancer death in children. Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) is a targetable metabolic checkpoint that, in preclinical models, inhibits anti-tumor immunity following chemotherapy.

Methods: We conducted a phase I trial (NCT02502708) of the oral IDO-pathway inhibitor indoximod in children with recurrent brain tumors or newly diagnosed diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG). Separate dose-finding arms were performed for indoximod in combination with oral temozolomide (200 mg/m2/day x 5 days in 28-day cycles), or with palliative conformal radiation. Blood samples were collected at baseline and monthly for single-cell RNA-sequencing with paired single-cell T cell receptor sequencing.

Results: Eighty-one patients were treated with indoximod-based combination therapy. Median follow-up was 52 months (range 39-77 months). Maximum tolerated dose was not reached, and the pediatric dose of indoximod was determined as 19.2 mg/kg/dose, twice daily. Median overall survival was 13.3 months (n = 68, range 0.2-62.7) for all patients with recurrent disease and 14.4 months (n = 13, range 4.7-29.7) for DIPG. The subset of n = 26 patients who showed evidence of objective response (even a partial or mixed response) had over 3-fold longer median OS (25.2 months, range 5.4-61.9, p = 0.006) compared to n = 37 nonresponders (7.3 months, range 0.2-62.7). Four patients remain free of active disease longer than 36 months. Single-cell sequencing confirmed emergence of new circulating CD8 T cell clonotypes with late effector phenotype.

Conclusions: Indoximod was well tolerated and could be safely combined with chemotherapy and radiation. Encouraging preliminary evidence of efficacy supports advancing to Phase II/III trials for pediatric brain tumors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10836763PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noad174DOI Listing

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