- Monga, Varun;
- Fadul, Camilo;
- Schiff, David;
- Taylor, Jennie;
- Chowdhary, Sajeel;
- Bettegowda, Chetan;
- Ansstas, George;
- De La Fuente, Macarena;
- Anderson, Mark;
- Shonka, Nicole;
- Damek, Denise;
- Carrillo, Jose;
- Kunschner-Ronan, Lara;
- Chaudhary, Rekha;
- Jaeckle, Kurt;
- Senecal, Francis;
- Kaley, Thomas;
- Morrison, Tara;
- Thomas, Alissa;
- Welch, Mary;
- Iwamoto, Fabio;
- Cachia, David;
- Cohen, Adam;
- Vora, Shivangi;
- Knopp, Michael;
- Dunn, Ian;
- Kumthekar, Priya;
- Sarkaria, Jann;
- Geyer, Susan;
- Carrero, Xiomara;
- Martinez-Lage, Maria;
- Cahill, Daniel;
- Brown, Paul;
- Giannini, Caterina;
- Santagata, Sandro;
- Barker, Frederick;
- Galanis, Evanthia;
- Brastianos, Priscilla;
- Twohy, Erin;
- Gerstner, Elizabeth;
- Kaufmann, Timothy;
- Iafrate, A;
- Lennerz, Jochen;
- Jeyapalan, Suriya;
- Piccioni, David
PURPOSE: Patients with progressive or recurrent meningiomas have limited systemic therapy options. Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) inhibition has a synthetic lethal relationship with NF2 loss. Given the predominance of NF2 mutations in meningiomas, we evaluated the efficacy of GSK2256098, a FAK inhibitor, as part of the first genomically driven phase II study in recurrent or progressive grade 1-3 meningiomas. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Eligible patients whose tumors screened positively for NF2 mutations were treated with GSK2256098, 750 mg orally twice daily, until progressive disease. Efficacy was evaluated using two coprimary end points: progression-free survival at 6 months (PFS6) and response rate by Macdonald criteria, where PFS6 was evaluated separately within grade-based subgroups: grade 1 versus 2/3 meningiomas. Per study design, the FAK inhibitor would be considered promising in this patient population if either end point met the corresponding decision criteria for efficacy. RESULTS: Of 322 patients screened for all mutation cohorts of the study, 36 eligible and evaluable patients with NF2 mutations were enrolled and treated: 12 grade 1 and 24 grade 2/3 patients. Across all grades, one patient had a partial response and 24 had stable disease as their best response to treatment. In grade 1 patients, the observed PFS6 rate was 83% (10/12 patients; 95% CI, 52 to 98). In grade 2/3 patients, the observed PFS6 rate was 33% (8/24 patients; 95% CI, 16 to 55). The study met the PFS6 efficacy end point both for the grade 1 and the grade 2/3 cohorts. Treatment was well tolerated; seven patients had a maximum grade 3 adverse event that was at least possibly related to treatment with no grade 4 or 5 events. CONCLUSION: GSK2256098 was well tolerated and resulted in an improved PFS6 rate in patients with recurrent or progressive NF2-mutated meningiomas, compared with historical controls. The criteria for promising activity were met, and FAK inhibition warrants further evaluation for this patient population.