Brigimadlin Versus Doxorubicin in Advanced Dedifferentiated Liposarcoma: Efficacy, Safety and Translational Data from Brightline-1, a Randomized Phase 2/3 Trial.
Researchers
Patrick Schöffski, Roberta Sanfilippo, Javier Martín-Broto, Akira Kawai, Jayesh Desai, Patricia LoRusso, Robert G Maki, Robin L Jones, Jean-Yves Blay, Alannah Smrke, Albiruni Abdul Razak, Antoine Italiano, Ana Sebio, Rastislav Bahleda, Yeh Chen Lee, Winette T A van der Graaf, Xing Zhang, Tsvetan Biyukov, Michael Teufel, Eric Fu, Mehdi Lahmar, Andrew J Wagner
Abstract
The phase 2/3 Brightline-1 trial (NCT05218499) assessed the MDM2-p53 antagonist brigimadlin versus standard-of-care doxorubicin as first-line treatment for MDM2-amplified, locally advanced/metastatic dedifferentiated liposarcoma (DDLPS). Patients with MDM2-amplified, locally advanced or metastatic, unresectable, progressive, or recurrent DDLPS were eligible. In phase 2, patients received oral brigimadlin 30 or 45 mg, or intravenous doxorubicin 75 mg/m2 (all once every 3 weeks). Following a preplanned analysis, in phase 3 patients received brigimadlin 45 mg or doxorubicin 75 mg/m2. The primary endpoint was PFS by blinded central independent review. Between April 13, 2022, and Aug 22, 2023, 148 patients received brigimadlin 45 mg and 162 received doxorubicin. At data cutoff, median PFS was 8.4 months with brigimadlin versus 7.2 months with doxorubicin [Hazard Ratio 0.79 (95% Confidence Interval, 0.6-1.06), P = 0.096]; the primary endpoint was not met. The confirmed objective response rate was 22.3% with brigimadlin and 8.6% with doxorubicin. The most-common grade ≥3 adverse events with brigimadlin were neutropenia (n = 54, 36.7%) and thrombocytopenia (n = 41, 27.9%). Translational analysis demonstrated that brigimadlin activated the TP53 pathway but no biomarkers predictive of efficacy were identified. While brigimadlin showed activity in this patient population, the median PFS with doxorubicin was substantially longer than anticipated and the primary endpoint of PFS was not met. The safety profile of brigimadlin also did not appear to be more manageable than that of doxorubicin. The translational results will guide future clinical investigations of MDM2-p53 antagonists.Source: PubMed (PMID: 42268294)View Original on PubMed