American Association for Cancer Research
Browse

Table S3 from Results of the Phase I/II Study and Preliminary B-cell Gene Signature of Combined Inhibition of Glutamine Metabolism and EGFR in Colorectal Cancer

Download (10.88 kB)
dataset
posted on 2025-05-13, 19:34 authored by Kristen K. Ciombor, Seong-Woo Bae, Jennifer G. Whisenant, Gregory D. Ayers, Quanhu Sheng, Todd E. Peterson, Gary T. Smith, Kangyu Lin, Saikat Chowdhury, Preeti Kanikarla Marie, Alexey Sorokin, Allison S. Cohen, Laura W. Goff, Dana B. Cardin, John Paul Shen, Scott Kopetz, Cathy Eng, Yu Shyr, Jordan Berlin, H. Charles Manning

Supplementary Table

Funding

Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT)

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

History

ARTICLE ABSTRACT

EGFR-targeting mAbs are essential for managing rat sarcoma virus wild-type metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC), but their limited efficacy necessitates exploring immunologic and metabolic factors influencing response. This study evaluated glutamine metabolism targeting with EGFR inhibition to identify response biomarkers in patients with prior anti-EGFR treatment progression. We conducted a phase I/II trial in patients with KRAS wild-type mCRC, combining panitumumab (6 mg/kg) and CB-839 (600 mg/kg or 800 mg/kg), hypothesizing that the dual inhibition of glutamine metabolism and MAPK signaling would enhance outcomes. As study correlatives, we investigated the B-cell activation signature “B-score” and glutamine PET as potential treatment response biomarkers. The combination of panitumumab and CB-839 was tolerable with manageable side effects, including grade 4 hypomagnesemia in four patients, a known panitumumab-related event. Two patients achieved partial response, and five had stable disease, with a 41% disease control rate. Median progression-free survival and overall survival were 1.84 and 8.87 months, respectively. A positive correlation between “B-score” and lesion size reduction suggested its association with clinical benefit (partial response and stable disease). Lower “B-score” correlated with greater tumor avidity for glutamine by PET, indicating B-cell activation sensitivity to glutamine depletion. The combination of CB-839 and panitumumab showed safety and promising preliminary responses, but the study closed early due to CB-839 development termination. The B-cell activation signature “B-score” emerged as a potential biomarker for EGFR and glutaminase inhibition in mCRC, warranting further studies. These findings suggest opportunities to improve immune response and therapies in glutaminolysis-dependent tumors.

Usage metrics

    Clinical Cancer Research

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC