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ID 119051
Author
Homma, Sakae Toho University
Ogura, Takashi Kanagawa Cardiovascular and Respiratory Center
Arai, Naoki Ibaraki Higashi National Hospital
Tomii, Keisuke Kobe City Medical Center General Hospital
Kamio, Koichiro Nippon Medical School
Sakamoto, Susumu Toho University
Miyazaki, Yasunari Tokyo Medical and Dental University
Tomioka, Hiromi Kobe City Medical Center West Hospital
Hisata, Shu Jichi Medical University
Handa, Tomohiro Kyoto University
Azuma, Arata Nippon Medical School
Keywords
Clinical trial
Forced vital capacity
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
Multi-kinase inhibitor
Phase 2
Content Type
Journal Article
Description
Background: TAS-115, a novel oral multi-kinase inhibitor, showed antifibrotic effects in in vitro and in vivo animal models of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF).
Methods: In this exploratory phase 2 study, IPF patients with a percent predicted forced vital capacity (%FVC) decline ≥5% acquired within the previous 6 months were enrolled. Patients were divided into three pre-treatment cohorts, namely, treatment-naïve, pirfenidone, or nintedanib. TAS-115 was administered orally at 200 mg/day with a 5-day on and 2-day off regimen. After 13 weeks of treatment, patients entered a 13-week extension treatment period where the efficacy was evaluated. The primary endpoint was the difference in slope of %FVC decline at Week 13 from baseline. Safety was also evaluated.
Results: Between June 2018 and July 2019, 46 patients were enrolled, and 30 (65.2%) patients completed the 13-week treatment. Of these, 22 (47.8%) proceeded to extension treatment. For the primary endpoint, TAS-115 treatment lowered the slope of the %FVC decline of 0.0750%/day (95% confidence interval: 0.0341–0.1158%/day) at Week 13. Efficacy was also demonstrated at Week 26. Treatment-related adverse events were reported in 40 (88.9%) patients, but most were manageable by dose reduction, dose interruption, or symptomatic treatment.
Conclusions: TAS-115 treatment was effective, assessed using intra-patient change in slope of %FVC decline as a surrogate endpoint in patients with IPF pre-treated with pirfenidone or nintedanib and treatment-naïve patients. TAS-115 showed acceptable tolerability and a manageable safety profile.
Journal Title
Respiratory Investigation
ISSN
22125345
22125353
NCID
AA12579673
AA12797947
Publisher
The Japanese Respiratory Society|Elsevier
Volume
61
Issue
4
Start Page
498
End Page
507
Published Date
2023-05-30
Rights
This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
EDB ID
DOI (Published Version)
URL ( Publisher's Version )
FullText File
language
eng
TextVersion
Publisher
departments
Medical Sciences
University Hospital