AI Article Synopsis

  • This study evaluated the safety and feasibility of combining the androgen receptor antagonist enzalutamide with the selective glucocorticoid receptor modulator relacorilant in patients with advanced prostate cancer.
  • A total of 35 patients were enrolled, with an established safe dosage combination leading to positive pharmacokinetic results and some patients showing prostate-specific antigen (PSA) response.
  • The trial is significant as it is the first of its kind, suggesting the need for further research into its effectiveness and potential biomarkers for identifying which patients may benefit most.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The majority of patients with metastatic prostate cancer who receive androgen-deprivation therapy and androgen receptor (AR) signaling inhibitors (ARSI) progress. Activation of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) is associated with ARSI resistance. This single-arm phase I trial assessed safety and pharmacokinetic (PK) feasibility of a combined AR antagonist (enzalutamide) and selective GR modulator (relacorilant) in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC).

Patients And Methods: This was a phase I trial (NCT03674814) of relacorilant and enzalutamide in patients with refractory mCRPC enrolled using a 6+3 design. The enzalutamide dose was kept constant at 120 mg/d with escalating doses of relacorilant based on safety and PK measures in cohorts of ≥6 patients. The primary objective was safety and establishment of pharmacologically active doses. Secondary objectives were related to antitumor activity.

Results: Thirty-five patients with mCRPC were enrolled. Twenty-three were accrued across three dose cohorts in the dose-escalation phase, and 12 enrolled at the recommended phase II dose. The combination was generally well tolerated, safe, and achieved desirable enzalutamide PK. RP2D of 120 + 150 mg/d, respectively, was established. Median time on study was 2.2 months with four patients remaining on study for longer than 11 months. Four of 12 evaluable patients had a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) partial response.

Conclusions: This is the first prospective trial combining an AR antagonist and a nonsteroidal selective GR modulator. The combination was safe and well tolerated with PSA response and prolonged disease control observed in a limited subset of patients. Further prospective trials are justified to evaluate efficacy and identify predictive biomarkers of response.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11147727PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-23-3636DOI Listing

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