PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Aggen, David AU - McKean, Meredith AU - Lakhani, Nehal AU - Bashir, Babar AU - Hoffman-Censits, Jean AU - Alhalabi, Omar AU - Guancial, Elizabeth AU - Bowman, Isaac AU - Tan, Alan AU - Lingaraj, Trupti AU - Timothy, Marissa AU - Ortiz-Otero, Nerymar AU - Bartolini, Wilmin AU - Kacena, Katherine AU - Malek, Karim AU - Santillana, Sergio AU - Luke, Jason TI - 661 Initial results from a phase 1a/b study of IK-175, an oral AHR inhibitor, as a single agent and in combination with nivolumab in patients with advanced solid tumors and urothelial carcinoma AID - 10.1136/jitc-2022-SITC2022.0661 DP - 2022 Nov 01 TA - Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer PG - A692--A692 VI - 10 IP - Suppl 2 4099 - http://jitc.bmj.com/content/10/Suppl_2/A692.short 4100 - http://jitc.bmj.com/content/10/Suppl_2/A692.full SO - J Immunother Cancer2022 Nov 01; 10 AB - Background Aryl Hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) is a transcription factor activated by binding to ligands, including kynurenine, causing expression of immune modulating genes leading to immunosuppression. IK-175 is an oral, selective, small molecule being developed as a potential first-in-class AHR inhibitor to overcome the immunosuppressive effects driving resistance to PD-1/L1 inhibitors. Computational and tissue-based analyses revealed urothelial cancer as having high levels of AHR signaling and nuclear protein localization.Methods Dose escalation patients with advanced solid tumors received escalating daily doses of IK-175 as monotherapy or in combination with nivolumab 480 mg IV every 4 weeks (mTPI-2 design). Expansion cohorts of both treatment arms enrolled heavily pretreated urothelial carcinoma patients, who have progressed within 12 weeks of last dose of PD-1/L1 inhibitors (Simon 2-stage design). Expansion cohorts were enriched to include AHR+ patients determined by immunohistochemistry using a cutoff of 65% cells with 2+/3+ staining. Study objectives included evaluation of safety, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, MTD, RP2D and antitumor activity (RECIST 1.1) of IK-175 in both arms.Results As of June 24, 2022, 43 patients were evaluated: 26 monotherapy (from 200 to 1600mg PO daily) and 17 combination (800 and 1200mg PO daily). Median age was 70 years (range 28-82), 28/43 (65%) patients received ≥3 lines of prior therapy including CPIs. 4/11 monotherapy and 3/11 combination urothelial cancer patients had AHR+ tumors. In both treatment arms, MTD was not reached and 1200mg PO QD was the selected IK-175 expansion dose based on the totality of the data. Most common treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) in monotherapy were nausea and rash with 3 patients (12%) reporting ≥Grade3 TRAEs (nausea, proteinuria, and adrenal insufficiency). Most frequent TRAEs in combination arm were fatigue and dysgeusia with 1 patient (6%) reporting ≥Grade3 TRAEs (immune-related arthritis). Other suspected immune-related AEs included adrenal insufficiency, proteinuria, rash, and myopathy. In dose escalation, 3/13 response-evaluable patients in monotherapy and 2/5 in combination had prolonged stable disease (range 16-74 weeks). Preliminary assessment of antitumor activity in 20 response-evaluable urothelial carcinoma patients in both treatment arms showed 3 confirmed partial responses, having DoR up to 11.7 months and ongoing. Updated results, immune monitoring, and biomarker analysis will be presented.Conclusions In this initial analysis, IK-175 was well tolerated and showed encouraging antitumor activity in eligible urothelial cancer patients in both monotherapy and combination arms. Based on the objective responses observed in stage 1 of both cohorts, investigation of AHR inhibition with IK-175 in urothelial carcinoma is ongoing.Trial Registration NCT04200963Ethics Approval This trial was approved by all participating IRBs.