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Clinical efficacy of pembrolizumab is influenced by target occupancy in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients: a joint target-mediated drug disposition (TMDD) – survival model
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  • Marion Ferreira,
  • Thomas Sécher,
  • Sarah Lobet,
  • Desvignes Céline,
  • Lilou Guillot,
  • Marion Pronost,
  • Gilles Paintaud,
  • Theodora Bejan-Angoulvant,
  • Nathalie Heuzé-Vourc'h,
  • David Ternant
Marion Ferreira
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Thomas Sécher
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Sarah Lobet
1Inserm UMR 1069, Nutrition Croissance et Cancer (N2C), Tours University, Tours, France
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Desvignes Céline
Université de Tours
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Lilou Guillot
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Marion Pronost
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Gilles Paintaud
Universite Francois Rabelais de tours
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Theodora Bejan-Angoulvant
University Hospital Tours
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Nathalie Heuzé-Vourc'h
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David Ternant
Université de Tours

Corresponding Author:david.ternant@univ-tours.fr

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Abstract

Introduction. Pembrolizumab is an anti-programmed-death 1 (PD-1) monoclonal antibody used in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) for which dose-concentration-response relationship remains unclear. Our aim was to assess this relationship using joint population target-mediated drug disposition (TMDD) and parametric survival modeling. Methods. This prospective observational monocentric study (RICEPS, NCT04804137) included 19 NSCLC patients who received 200 mg pembrolizumab infusions every 3 weeks. Blood samples were collected at each visit before infusion. Pembrolizumab pharmacokinetics and hazard function for progression were described using one compartment TMDD Wagner model and a log-logistic model, respectively. The association of body surface area (BSA), baseline white blood cell count (WBC) and programmed-Death Ligand 1 tumor expression ratio (PDL1R) with pharmacokinetic parameters and progression-free survival PFS was assessed. Results. Pembrolizumab volume of distribution (V=5.3 L/m2) increased with BSA (p=0.025) while estimated baseline target level (R0=0.22 nM.G-1.L) increased with WBC (p=0.033). Other parameters of the model were clearance (CL=0.19 L/day), target elimination rate (kdeg=0.17 day-1) and pembrolizumab-target steady-state dissociation constant (KSS=4.9 nM). Hazard to progress was halved for concentration and target occupancy of C50=8 mg/L and R50=0.10 nM, respectively. Discussion. This study is the first that investigated the relationship between pembrolizumab pharmacokinetics, target occupancy and PFS. We observed target-mediated nonlinear pharmacokinetics and an association between increased pembrolizumab concentrations and improved clinical efficacy. These results do not support the use of flat dose, but rather suggest a benefit of individual dosing optimization.