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Please note, these are the actual video-recorded proceedings from the live CME event and may include the use of trade names and other raw, unedited content. Select slides from the original presentation are omitted where Research To Practice was unable to obtain permission from the publication source and/or author. Links to view the actual reference materials have been provided for your use in place of any omitted slides. Challenging Cases in Select Gastrointestinal Cancers Oncologist and Nurse Investigators Consult on Actual Patients from the Practices of the Invited Faculty Saturday, May 3, 2014 12:00 PM – 1:30 PM Faculty Tanios Bekaii-Saab, MD Charles S Fuchs, MD, MPH Jessica Mitchell, RN, CNP, MPH Yahna T Smith, MSN, CNP Moderator Neil Love, MD Oncology 6-Part Case Series: Key Themes • Mechanisms of action of novel agents and tissue assays to predict response • Side effects and toxicities of novel agents; dose adjustments • Assessment and management of adherence • Specific goals of therapy and likely outcomes; sequencing of agents in advanced disease • Local and systemic complications of cancer: Fatigue, pain, CNS involvement • Care of older, frail patients and those with comorbidities Oncology 6-Part Case Series: Key Themes • Clinical trials as a means to access new treatments earlier • Management of anxiety and depression • Key determinants of patient satisfaction: What do people with cancer want and need? • Quality, value and cost: Investing resources optimally • End-of-life care and planning • Impact of the cancer experience on family and loved ones, including minor children • Impact of the oncology experience on oncology health professionals Agenda A Patient with Chronic Alcoholism and Metastatic Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) • 48 yo man with stable disease on sorafenib whose adherence to treatments is challenged by his alcoholism (Ms Mitchell) Two Patients with Metastatic Gastroesophageal (GE) Cancer • 68 yo man with HER2-positive, metastatic gastric cancer (Ms Smith) • 38 yo mother of 3 young children diagnosed with recurrent metastatic disease 9 months after gastrectomy (Ms Mitchell) Agenda A Patient with Rectal Cancer and Metastases Confined to the Liver • A 55-year-old man diagnosed with Stage III adenocarcinoma of the rectum (Ms Smith) A Patient with Disease Progression on Multiple Lines of Therapy; A Patient Rendered Disease Free with Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy • A 56-year-old woman with BRAF-mutant colon cancer metastatic to the liver (Ms Mitchell) • An 82-year-old woman with a history of congestive heart failure who presented with colon cancer that was surgically resected (Ms Smith) Case 1 (from the practice of Ms Mitchell) • A 48-year-old man with a history of alcohol-related cirrhosis (Child-Pugh A) was diagnosed in 2012 with extensive intrahepatic HCC and small metastases to the skin of the abdominal wall that were biopsy proven • The patient has received sorafenib intermittently – When a full dose was administered, he developed moderate hand-foot syndrome, anorexia and mucositis – With dose reduction the patient was better able to tolerate the drug and has experienced stable disease to date • The patient has been in and out of alcohol rehabilitation and continues to binge drink • Adherence to his oncologic medications has been problematic Pre-sorafenib Post-sorafenib Stable disease Discussion Point Clinical manifestations of HCC: Sites of metastases and biologic characteristics HCC-Related Symptoms • Pain • Fatigue • Weight loss • Ascites • Jaundice Discussion Point Diagnosis and interdisciplinary care of HCC; the challenge of coexisting liver disease Risk Factors for HCC A study of SEER-Medicare, 1994-2010 (≥68 years old) Risk factors HCC cases (N = 6,991) HCV 22.9% HBV 6.9% Alcohol-related disease 31.2% Rare metabolic disorder 4.5% Diabetes 59.6% Obesity 8.8% Diabetes and/or obesity 61.5% Welzel TM et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2013;108:1314-21. Discussion Point Local treatment of HCC for palliation and cure (organ transplant, TACE, radiofrequency ablation) Discussion Point Risks, benefits and approach to dosing of sorafenib N Engl J Med 2008;359:378-90. SHARP: Sorafenib in Advanced HCC (Child-Pugh A) Sorafenib (n = 299) Placebo (n = 303) p-value Median overall survival 10.7 mo 7.9 mo <0.001 One-year survival rate 44% 33% 0.009 Time to symptomatic progression 4.1 mo 4.9 mo 0.77 Time to radiologic progression 5.5 mo 2.8 mo <0.001 43% 32% 0.002 Outcome Disease control rate Grade ≥3 Adverse Events Hand-foot syndrome Diarrhea Llovet JM et al. N Engl J Med 2008;359(4):378-90. Sorafenib 8% 8% Placebo <1% 2% Discussion Point Prevention and management of hand-foot syndrome Getting a Handle on Hand-Foot Syndrome Topicals Inflammation (Tenderness, edema, erythema) Hyperkeratosis (Thickening, peeling, cracking) Courtesy of M Lacouture. Urea/Lactic acid Orals Pyridoxine Celecoxib Topicals Urea 40% cream Salicylic acid cream Clobetasol 0.05% cream Discussion Point Ongoing Phase III trials in HCC Investigational Agents for HCC • Brivanib • Tivantinib (ARQ 197) • Lenvatinib (E7080) • Cabozantinib • Ramucirumab • Regorafenib REACH Phase III Study Design Eligibility • Advanced HCC • Child-Pugh A cirrhosis • Progression or intolerance to 1st-line sorafenib Ramucirumab + best supportive care (BSC) R (N = 565) Primary endpoint: Overall survival Estimated primary completion: March 2014 www.clinicaltrials.gov, Accessed March 12, 2014 (NCT01140347) Placebo + BSC RESORCE Phase III Study Design The study is ongoing and currently recruiting participants. Eligibility • Advanced HCC • Child-Pugh A cirrhosis • Progression or intolerance to 1st-line sorafenib Regorafenib + best supportive care (BSC) R 2:1 (N = 530) Placebo + BSC Primary endpoint: Overall survival Estimated primary completion: October 2015 www.clinicaltrials.gov, Accessed March 12, 2014 (NCT01774344) Two Patients with Metastatic Gastroesophageal (GE) Cancer • 68 yo man with HER2-positive, metastatic gastric cancer (Ms Smith) • 38 yo mother of 3 young children diagnosed with recurrent metastatic disease 9 months after gastrectomy (Ms Mitchell) Case 2 (from the practice of Ms Smith) • A 68-year-old man with HER2-positive metastatic gastric adenocarcinoma received first-line therapy with FOLFOX and trastuzumab, which resulted in a complete response • Treatment was then stopped for 6 months, at which time disease progression was documented • The patient was then restarted on treatment Pretreatment 2 months into treatment Discussion Point Comparison of HER2 testing in breast and gastric/GEJ cancers Bang YJ et al. Lancet 2010;376(9742):687-97. ToGA: Median Overall Survival Median OS (months) HR p-value Trastuzumab plus chemotherapy 13.8 0.74 0.0046 Chemotherapy alone 11.1 Bang YJ et al. Lancet 2010;376(9742):687-97. ToGA: Cardiac Safety of Trastuzumab + Chemotherapy versus Chemotherapy Alone FC FC + T Cardiac adverse events (AEs) (All grades) 6% 6% Cardiac AEs (Grade 3/4) 3% 1% Cardiac failure <1% <1% Cardiac dysfunction (≥10% drop in LVEF to an absolute value <50%) 1% 5% Bang YJ et al. Lancet 2010;376(9742):687-97. Ongoing Phase III Clinical Trials Primary Endpoint Phase Disease Setting N Regimen II/III Metastatic gastric and GEJ, 2nd line 412 Arm A: T-DM1 3.6 mg/kg q3wk Arm B: T-DM1 2.4 mg/kg weekly Arm C: Standard taxane OS III Metastatic gastric and GEJ, 1st line 780 Arm A: Pertuz + T/Cis/FP Arm B: Placebo + T/Cis/FP OS III Metastatic gastric and GEJ, 1st line 400 Arm A: T 6 mg q3wk + Cape/Cis Arm B: T 10 mg q3wk + Cape/Cis OS III Esophagus and GEJ, Neoadjuvant 480 Arm A: RT with Carbo/Pac/T Arm B: RT with Carbo/Pac DFS III Previously untreated resectable Esophagogastric 1,140 Arm A: Lapatinib + chemo Arm B: Bevacizumab + chemo Arm C: Chemo Safety, OS T = Trastuzumab www.clinicaltrials.gov, May 2014 Case 3 (from the practice of Ms Mitchell) • A 38-year-old married woman and mother of 3 young children presented with metastatic gastric cancer in 2010 and received DCF followed by resection: – She developed significant mucositis in response to DCF and experienced a difficult postoperative course, including bacteremia and severe depression. • Nine months later she complained of persistent abdominal pain and was placed on FOLFOX, which she tolerated poorly. • Her pain, now diffuse, worsened and her disease ultimately progressed in the peritoneum and bone. • The patient worked as an ultrasound technician in the oncology clinic along with her husband who is an IT professional there. • They both struggled with her diagnosis and how to discuss her disease and the possibility of her death with their young children. 2010: Thickened GEJ and gastric wall at diagnosis Preferred Regimens for Metastatic or Locally Advanced Gastric Cancer Two-drug regimens preferred due to lower toxicity Three-drug regimens should be reserved for medically fit patients with good PS and access to frequent toxicity evaluation • Docetaxel, cisplatin, fluorouracil (DCF) • DCF modifications – Docetaxel, oxaliplatin, fluorouracil – Docetaxel, carboplatin, fluorouracil • Epirubicin, cisplatin, fluorouracil (ECF) • ECF modifications – Epirubicin, oxaliplatin, fluorouracil – Epirubicin, cisplatin, capecitabine – Epirubicin, oxaliplatin, capecitabine • Fluoropyrimidine and cisplatin • Fluoropyrimidine and oxaliplatin • Fluoropyrimidine and irinotecan NCCN Guidelines, Gastric Cancer, v2.2013. Discussion Point Ramucirumab: Mechanism of action and available research data as a single agent or in combination with chemotherapy Agents Targeting the VEGF Pathway Anti-VEGF antibody (bevacizumab) Anti-VEGFR2 antibody (ramucirumab) VEGF-A Soluble VEGF receptor (Ziv-aflibercept) VEGFR-1 P P P P VEGFR-2 P P P P VEGFR-3 P P P P Endothelial cell Small-molecule inhibitors of VEGFR (regorafenib, PTK-787, AZD2171, motesanib, sunitinib, sorafenib, pazopanib, axitinib, etc) REGARD Phase III Study in Gastric or GEJ Adenocarcinoma S C R E E N R A N D O M I Z E 2:1 Ramucirumab 8 mg/kg q2wk + BSC (n = 238) Placebo q2wk + BSC (n = 117) Treatment until disease progression or intolerable toxicity N = 355 BSC = best supportive care; GEJ = gastroesophageal junction Overall survival: 5.2 vs 3.8 months Progression-free survival: 2.1 vs 1.3 months All grade/Grade ≥3 hypertension: 16%/8% vs 8%/3% Fuchs CS et al. Lancet 2014;383(9911):31-9. Tumor assessment, survival, and safety follow-up RAINBOW: Phase III Study of Paclitaxel ± Ramucirumab in Second-Line Gastric Cancer 665 patients after failure of FU or platinum-based therapy R A N Weekly Paclitaxel + Ramucirumab (n = 330) D O M I Z Weekly Paclitaxel + Placebo (n = 335) E Overall survival: 9.6 vs 7.4 months Progression-free survival: 4.4 vs 2.9 months Wilke H et al. Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium 2014;Abstract LBA7. RAINBOW: Efficacy Summary Ramucirumab + Paclitaxel Placebo + Paclitaxel p-value Response rate 28% 16% 0.0001 Disease control rate 80% 64% <0.0001 Median PFS 4.40 mo 2.86 mo <0.0001 Median OS 9.63 mo 7.36 mo 0.0169 Efficacy Parameter Wilke H et al. Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium 2014;Abstract LBA7. FDA News Release (April 21, 2014) • The U.S. FDA approved ramucirumab to treat patients with advanced gastric cancer or gastroesophageal junction (GEJ) adenocarcinoma. • Single-agent ramucirumab is FDA approved for patients with unresectable or metastatic gastric or GEJ cancer after being treated with a fluoropyrimidineor platinum-containing therapy. http://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/ucm394107.htm Possible Side Effects Associated with Ramucirumab • Hypertension • Fatigue • Abdominal pain • Anemia • Decreased appetite • Vomiting • Bleeding or hemorrhage • Dysphagia • Dyspnea Fuchs CS et al. Lancet 2014;383(9911):31-9. Case 4 (from the practice of Ms Smith) • A 55-year-old man was diagnosed with Stage III adenocarcinoma of the rectum and received neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy followed by surgical resection • He was noted on restaging images to have liver metastases • He received FOLFOX with bevacizumab and went on to surgical removal of the hepatic metastases • He is currently without evidence of disease a year and a half later March 2012: Bilobular liver mets November 2013: After resection of liver mets and RFA Postresection Post-radiofrequency ablation Discussion Point Clinical approach to patients with liveronly metastases; role of neoadjuvant and adjuvant systemic treatment Colorectal Liver Metastases • Hepatic metastases occur in approximately 50% of CRC patients and account for at least two thirds of all CRC deaths • 25% of CRC patients present with hepatic metastases • 30% to 60% of patients develop hepatic metastases Abdalla et al. Annals of Surgical Oncology 2006;13(10):1271-80; Donadon et al. Gastrointest Cancer Res 2007;1:20-7. Contraindications to Resection Relative Absolute Extrahepatic metastases Peritoneal carcinomatosis Colonic recurrence Multiple extrahepatic metastases Solitary resectable peritoneal metastasis Inability to perform hepatic R0 resection Hilar lymph node metastases — Donadon et al. Gastrointest Cancer Res 2007;1:20-7. Discussion Point Role of up-front systemic therapy for patients presenting with a primary tumor and simultaneous metastatic disease Phase III TRIBE Study Schema INDUCTION MAINTENANCE FOLFIRI + Bevacizumab (Up to 12 cycles) Eligibility • Untreated metastatic colorectal cancer • Unresectable R 5-FU/LV + Bev (N = 508) FOLFOXIRI + Bevacizumab (Up to 12 cycles) 5-FU/LV + Bev Maintenance until disease progression PFS: OS: Response rate: R0 resection rate: 9.7 vs 12.1 mo 25.8 vs 31.0 mo 53% vs 65% 12% vs 15% Falcone A et al. Proc ASCO 2013;Abstract 3505. Possible Side Effects Associated with Bevacizumab Common Side Effects • Nosebleeds • Rhinitis • Headache • Hypertension • Proteinuria • Lacrimation disorder Serious Side Effects • Hemorrhage • Thromboembolism • GI perforation • Wound-healing complications • Reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLS) Phase III randomized, placebo (PL)-controlled, double-blind study of intravenous calcium/magnesium (CaMg) to prevent oxaliplatin-induced sensory neurotoxicity (sNT), N08CB: An alliance for clinical trials in oncology study Loprinzi CL et al. Proc ASCO 2013;Abstract 3501. Discussion Point Second-line treatment for patients with disease progression on first-line therapy with bevacizumab/chemotherapy TML (ML18147): Phase III Study of Bevacizumab Beyond First Disease Progression Progression on bevacizumab + standard first-line CT (either oxaliplatin or irinotecan-based) (n = 820) Standard second-line CT (n = 411) R CT switch: Oxaliplatin Irinotecan Irinotecan Oxaliplatin Bevacizumab + standard second-line CT (n = 409) Median survival: 9.8 vs 11.2 months Bennouna J et al. Lancet Oncol 2013;14(1):29-37. VELOUR: A Phase III Randomized Study with Ziv-Aflibercept versus Placebo in Combination with FOLFIRI in Second-Line mCRC Patients with mCRC after failure of an oxaliplatin-based regimen in first line (n = 1,226) Placebo + FOLFIRI (n = 614) R Ziv-Aflibercept + FOLFIRI (n = 612) Median survival: 12.1 vs 13.5 months Van Cutsem E et al. J Clin Oncol 2012;30(28):3499-506. Case 5 (from the practice of Ms Mitchell) • A 56-year-old woman with Gilbert syndrome presented with KRAS wild-type, BRAF-mutant colon cancer metastatic to the liver • The patient initially received FOLFOX/bevacizumab followed by FOLFIRI/bevacizumab and is currently receiving regorafenib – Aside from an ongoing problem with hand-foot skin reaction, the patient is otherwise tolerating the drug now in the third cycle • She is married and the mother of 3 children • She has an analytical personality and has anxiety about the future • She and her family are struggling with the acceptance of her diagnosis 2012: Liver disease at diagnosis 2014: Liver disease at beginning of regorafenib Grothey A et al. Lancet 2013;381(9863):303-12. CORRECT: Study Design and Survival Outcome Patients with refractory metastatic CRC (n = 760) 2:1 Regorafenib + BSC (n = 505) R Placebo + BSC (n = 255) Median survival: 6.4 vs 5.0 months Grothey A et al. Lancet 2013;381(9863):303-12. Discussion Point Considerations for initial dosing of regorafenib: Importance of careful follow-up in the first month of treatment Possible Side Effects Associated with Regorafenib • • • • • Hand-foot skin reaction Fatigue Diarrhea Hypertension Rash or desquamation Grothey A et al. Lancet 2013;381(9863):303-12. Hand-Foot Syndrome • “Palmoplantar erythrodysesthesia” • Most clinically significant dermatologic adverse event associated with multikinase inhibitors, with all-grade incidences of: – Sorafenib = 60% – Sunitinib = 30% – Regorafenib = 46% • May affect palms, soles and other areas exposed to friction or trauma • Reaction usually appears within first 6 weeks of therapy Lacouture M. ASCO Post 2012;3(18). www.ascopost.com. Possible Side Effects Associated with Regorafenib — Hepatotoxicity “Severe and sometimes fatal hepatotoxicity has been observed in clinical trials. Monitor hepatic function prior to and during treatment. Interrupt and then reduce or discontinue regorafenib for hepatotoxicity as manifested by elevated liver function tests or hepatocellular necrosis, depending upon severity and persistence.” Regorafenib Full Prescribing Information, Issued 9/2012