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Featured researches published by Yufan Zhao.


Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer | 2015

Preliminary results from a Phase I/II study of epacadostat (incb024360) in combination with pembrolizumab in patients with selected advanced cancers

Tara C. Gangadhar; Omid Hamid; David C. Smith; Todd Michael Bauer; Jeffrey S. Wasser; Jason J. Luke; Ani Sarkis Balmanoukian; David Ross Kaufman; Yufan Zhao; Janet Maleski; Lance Leopold; Thomas F. Gajewski

Meeting abstracts Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) is a tryptophan-catabolizing enzyme that is expressed in many cancers and induces immune tolerance by suppressing T cell responses. Epacadostat is a potent, selective oral inhibitor of IDO1. A dose-escalation study of epacadostat with


Gynecologic Oncology | 2017

A randomised, open-label, phase 2 study of the IDO1 inhibitor epacadostat (INCB024360) versus tamoxifen as therapy for biochemically recurrent (CA-125 relapse)–only epithelial ovarian cancer, primary peritoneal carcinoma, or fallopian tube cancer

Rebecca Kristeleit; Irina Davidenko; Vadim Shirinkin; Fatima El-Khouly; Igor Bondarenko; Michael J. Goodheart; Vera Gorbunova; Carol A. Penning; Jack G. Shi; Xiangdong Liu; Robert Newton; Yufan Zhao; Janet Maleski; Lance Leopold; Russell J. Schilder

OBJECTIVE Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase-1 (IDO1) is a key regulator of immune tolerance in ovarian cancer. This study investigated efficacy and safety of the IDO1 enzyme inhibitor epacadostat versus tamoxifen in patients with biochemical-only recurrence (CA-125 elevation) following complete remission after first-line chemotherapy for advanced epithelial ovarian, primary peritoneal, or fallopian tube cancer. METHODS In this open-label, phase 2 study (NCT01685255), patients were randomised 1:1 to epacadostat 600mg or tamoxifen 20mg twice daily for successive 28-day cycles and stratified by time since completion of first-line chemotherapy to first CA-125 elevation (3 to <12 or ≥12months). The primary endpoint was investigator-assessed progression-free survival (PFS; RECIST v1.1). Secondary endpoints included CA-125 response (Gynecologic Cancer InterGroup criteria), overall survival, safety, and tolerability. RESULTS The study was terminated primarily due to slow accrual and lack of evidence of superiority. Median PFS was 3.75months for epacadostat (n=22) versus 5.56months for tamoxifen (n=20; HR, 1.34 [95% CI, 0.58-3.14]; P=0.54). Of evaluable patients, 1 (5.0%) epacadostat and 3 (15.8%) tamoxifen patients had confirmed CA-125 responses. The most common treatment-emergent adverse event was fatigue (epacadostat, 36.4%; tamoxifen, 40.0%). Immune-related adverse events, observed with epacadostat only, were primarily rash (18.2%) and pruritus (9.1%). Epacadostat pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics were consistent with its known mechanism of action. IDO1 expression was observed in 94% of archival tumour samples. CONCLUSIONS This first report of immunotherapy evaluation in biochemical-only relapse ovarian cancer and of IDO1 inhibitor monotherapy in ovarian cancer found no significant difference in efficacy between epacadostat and tamoxifen. Epacadostat was generally well tolerated.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2018

Epacadostat Plus Pembrolizumab in Patients With Advanced Solid Tumors: Phase I Results From a Multicenter, Open-Label Phase I/II Trial (ECHO-202/KEYNOTE-037)

Tara Mitchell; Omid Hamid; David C. Smith; Todd M. Bauer; Jeffrey S. Wasser; Anthony J. Olszanski; Jason J. Luke; Ani Sarkis Balmanoukian; Emmett V. Schmidt; Yufan Zhao; Xiaohua Gong; Janet Maleski; Lance Leopold; Thomas F. Gajewski

Purpose Tumors may evade immunosurveillance through upregulation of the indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) enzyme. Epacadostat is a potent and highly selective IDO1 enzyme inhibitor. The open-label phase I/II ECHO-202/KEYNOTE-037 trial evaluated epacadostat plus pembrolizumab, a programmed death protein 1 inhibitor, in patients with advanced solid tumors. Phase I results on maximum tolerated dose, safety, tolerability, preliminary antitumor activity, and pharmacokinetics are reported. Patients and Methods Patients received escalating doses of oral epacadostat (25, 50, 100, or 300 mg) twice per day plus intravenous pembrolizumab 2 mg/kg or 200 mg every 3 weeks. During the safety expansion, patients received epacadostat (50, 100, or 300 mg) twice per day plus pembrolizumab 200 mg every 3 weeks. Results Sixty-two patients were enrolled and received one or more doses of study treatment. The maximum tolerated dose of epacadostat in combination with pembrolizumab was not reached. Fifty-two patients (84%) experienced treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs), with fatigue (36%), rash (36%), arthralgia (24%), pruritus (23%), and nausea (21%) occurring in ≥ 20%. Grade 3/4 TRAEs were reported in 24% of patients. Seven patients (11%) discontinued study treatment because of TRAEs. No TRAEs led to death. Epacadostat 100 mg twice per day plus pembrolizumab 200 mg every 3 weeks was recommended for phase II evaluation. Objective responses (per Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors [RECIST] version 1.1) occurred in 12 (55%) of 22 patients with melanoma and in patients with non–small-cell lung cancer, renal cell carcinoma, endometrial adenocarcinoma, urothelial carcinoma, and squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck. The pharmacokinetics of epacadostat and pembrolizumab and antidrug antibody rate were comparable to historical controls for monotherapies. Conclusion Epacadostat in combination with pembrolizumab generally was well tolerated and had encouraging antitumor activity in multiple advanced solid tumors.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014

Preliminary results from a phase 1/2 study of INCB024360 combined with ipilimumab (ipi) in patients (pts) with melanoma.

Geoffrey T. Gibney; Omid Hamid; Tara C. Gangadhar; Jose Lutzky; Anthony J. Olszanski; Thomas F. Gajewski; Bartosz Chmielowski; Peter D. Boasberg; Yufan Zhao; Robert Newton; Peggy Scherle; Jill Bowman; Janet Maleski; Lance Leopold; Jeffrey S. Weber


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017

Efficacy and safety of epacadostat plus pembrolizumab treatment of NSCLC: Preliminary phase I/II results of ECHO-202/KEYNOTE-037.

Tara C. Gangadhar; Bryan J. Schneider; Todd Michael Bauer; Jeffrey S. Wasser; Alexander I. Spira; Sandip Pravin Patel; Ani Sarkis Balmanoukian; Joshua Bauml; Emmett V. Schmidt; Yufan Zhao; Mark M. Jones; Ahmad A. Tarhini


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017

Epacadostat plus pembrolizumab in patients with advanced urothelial carcinoma: Preliminary phase I/II results of ECHO-202/KEYNOTE-037.

David C. Smith; Thomas F. Gajewski; Omid Hamid; Jeffrey S. Wasser; Anthony J. Olszanski; Sandip Pravin Patel; Ronac Mamtani; Emmett V. Schmidt; Yufan Zhao; Janet Maleski; Tara C. Gangadhar


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017

Epacadostat plus pembrolizumab in patients with advanced RCC: Preliminary phase I/II results from ECHO-202/KEYNOTE-037.

Omid Hamid; Todd Michael Bauer; Alexander I. Spira; Anthony J. Olszanski; Sandip Pravin Patel; Jeffrey S. Wasser; David C. Smith; Ani Sarkis Balmanoukian; Charu Aggarwal; Emmett V. Schmidt; Yufan Zhao; Hema Gowda; Tara C. Gangadhar


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017

Efficacy/safety of epacadostat plus pembrolizumab in triple-negative breast cancer and ovarian cancer: Phase I/II ECHO-202 study.

Alexander I. Spira; Omid Hamid; Todd Michael Bauer; Virginia F. Borges; Jeffrey S. Wasser; David C. Smith; Amy S. Clark; Emmett V. Schmidt; Yufan Zhao; Janet Maleski; Tara C. Gangadhar


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017

Safety of epacadostat 100 mg bid plus pembrolizumab 200 mg Q3W in advanced solid tumors: Phase 2 data from ECHO-202/KEYNOTE-037.

Omid Hamid; Todd Michael Bauer; Alexander I. Spira; David C. Smith; Anthony J. Olszanski; Ahmad A. Tarhini; Primo N. Lara; Thomas F. Gajewski; Jeffrey S. Wasser; Sandip Pravin Patel; Virginia F. Borges; Ani Sarkis Balmanoukian; Emmett V. Schmidt; Yufan Zhao; Mark M. Jones; Tara C. Gangadhar


Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2018

195TiP A phase 3, randomized, double-blind study of epacadostat plus pembrolizumab vs pembrolizumab as first-line therapy for metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (mNSCLC) expressing high PD-L1 levels (ECHO-305/KEYNOTE-654)

Luis Paz-Ares; S. Rubin; Yufan Zhao; L. Xu; Ayman Samkari; Mark M. Awad

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David C. Smith

University of Rhode Island

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Jeffrey S. Wasser

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Omid Hamid

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Tara C. Gangadhar

University of Pennsylvania

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Todd Michael Bauer

Sarah Cannon Research Institute

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