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Gynecologic Cancer Update 2010 Eric L. Eisenhauer, M.D. Assistant Professor Division of Gynecologic Oncology James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute Ohio State University School of Medicine Conflict of Interest Objectives • Review current guidelines for cervical cancer treatment • Discuss changes to 2009 FIGO staging system for cervical and endometrial cancer • Understand rationale for current surgical and medical treatment of endometrial cancer • Review recent data for the treatment of primary and recurrent ovarian cancer Cancer Statistics – 2010 Estimated New Cases 28% Breast 14% Estimated Deaths 26% Lung and bronchus Lung and bronchus 15% Breast 10% Colon and rectum 9% Colon and rectum 6% Uterine corpus 7% Pancreas 5% Thyroid 5% Ovary 4% Non-Hodgkin lymphoma 4% Non-Hodgkin lymphoma 4% Melanoma 3% Leukemia 3% Kidney 3% Uterine corpus 3% Ovary 2% Liver 3% Pancreas 2% Brain 207,090 21,880 43,470 39,840 13,850 Jemal, A. et al. CA Cancer J Clin 2010; 60:277-300 7,950 Estimated New Gynecologic Cancers: 2010 5% 3% 15% 51% 26% Uterus Ovary Cervix Vulva Vagina & Other Uterus 43,470 Vulva 3,900 Ovary 21,880 Vagina & Other 2,300 Cervix 12,200 Jemal, A. et al. CA Cancer J Clin 2010; 60:277-300 Estimated Gynecologic Cancer Deaths: 2010 15% 3% 3% 29% Uterus Ovary Cervix Vulva Vagina & Other 50% Ovary 13,850 Vulva 920 Uterus 7,950 Vagina & Other 780 Cervix 4,210 Jemal, A. et al. CA Cancer J Clin 2010; 60:277-300 Cervical Cancer Year Cases Deaths % 2006 9,710 3,700 38 2007 11,150 3,670 33 2008 11,070 3,870 35 2009 11,270 4,070 36 2010 12,200 4,210 35 Jemal A, et al. CA Cancer J Clin 2006-2010 Cervical Cancer • • • • Most common gyn cancer worldwide Clinical rather than surgical staging Correlation of FIGO to TNM is poor Minor changes to 2009 FIGO staging – Deletion of Stage 0 – Subdivision of Stage IIA • IIA1: tumor ≤ 4 cm with involv. < 2/3 upper vag • IIA2: tumor > 4 cm with involv. <2/3 upper vag Cervical Carcinoma Stage Distribution and Survival Stage I Distribution of Patients 62% Five-year Survival 85% II 18% 60% III 11% 35% IV 9% 15% Cervical Cancer • Poor prognostic factors: – Positive lymph nodes – Parametrial involvement – Positive resection margins • 1999 NCI Clinical Alert – Noted results of 5 randomized trials showing benefit of chemoradiation (cisplatin) over radiation alone Cervical Cancer • Since 1999, few frameshifts in thinking about cervical cancer therapy • Ongoing HPV vaccine trials • Attempts at consolidation therapy • Trials of targeted agents • New combinations for advanced or recurrent disease Chemotherapy for Advanced or Recurrent Cervical Cancer • Combination chemotherapy – GOG 76X; Cisplatin + paclitaxel, 46% RR (Rose et al, 1999) – GOG 169; cisplatin + paclitaxel vs cisplatin; improved RR not OS (Moore et al 2004) – GOG 179; topotecan + cisplatin; improved OS (Long et al, 2005) – GOG 204; topotecan, gemcitabine, vinorelbine, paclitaxel • Interim analysis: so sig benefit; RR, PFS and OS favors cisplatin + paclitaxel (Monk et al, 2009) • Favored regimen: cisplatin + paclitaxel • Role of carboplatin + paclitaxel? Uterine Cancer Year Cases Deaths % 2006 41,200 7,350 18 2007 39,080 7,400 19 2008 40,100 7,470 19 2009 42,160 7,780 18 2010 43,470 7,950 18 Jemal A, et al. CA Cancer J Clin 2006-2010 Uterine Neoplasia Hyperplasia Adenocarcinoma Sarcoma Sporadic Inherited •Lynch syndrome (HNPCC) •Cowden’s disease •BRCA syndrome? Type I •Estrogen-dependent •Endometrioid •MMR/MSI •PTEN, KRAS Type II •Estrogen-independent •Serous, clear cell •TP53, HER-2/neu, p16 Endometrial cancer incidence and mortality by histologic type Hamilton CA et al. Br J Cancer, 2006 Risk Factors Characteristic Late Menopause (age 52) Increased Risk 2.4 x Nulliparous 3x Unopposed Estrogen 10 x Obesity >30 lbs >50 lbs 3x 10 x **INCREASED ESTROGEN:PROGESTERONE** Hyperplasia-WHO Classification Types of Hyperplasia Simple Progressing to Cancer (%) 1 Complex Simple with Atypia 3 8 Complex with Atypia 29 RECENT EVIDENCE CHALLENGES THESE RATES OF PROGRESSION Kurman et al, Cancer 56:403,1985 Rates of progression HC Lacey JV Jr. Absolute risk of endometrial carcinoma during 20-year follow-up among women with endometrial hyperplasia. J Clin Oncol. 2010 Feb 10;28(5):788-92 If an endometrial biopsy shows complex atypical hyperplasia, what is the risk that an underlying endometrial cancer is present? Concurrent Carcinoma with Complex Atypical Hyperplasia GOG 167 • Pre-op diagnosis of CAH on EMB • 306 patients • 43% had carcinoma on final pathology – 16% high grade histologic cell types • serous, clear cell, undifferentiated – 30% had myometrial invasion – 10% stage IC CL Trimble, Concurrent endometrial carcinoma in women with biopsy of atypical endometrial hyperplasia: A GOG study, Cancer. 106 (4): 812-819, Feb 2006 Complex atypical hyperplasia – 48% found to have cancer – Invasive disease in 27% • 8% with deeply invasive and/or grade 3 disease Suh-Burgmann E, et al. Complex atypical endometrial hyperplasia: the risk of unrecognized adenocarcinoma and value of pre-operative dilation and curettage. Obstet Gynecol 2009;114:523-529. Surgery for CAH • At time of surgery, CONSIDER: – Perform Pelvic Washings – Intra-op Frozen Section – Have capability to perform surgical staging if needed – Surgical staging (modified or not) Revised FIGO staging FIGO 1988 FIGO 2009 STAGE I STAGE I A. Invasion < half myometrium B. Invasion ≥ half myometrium A. Limited to the endometrium B. Invasion to < half myometrium C. Invasion ≥ half myometrium STAGE II A. Endocervical glandular involvement B. Cervical stromal invasion STAGE III A. Invades serosa or adnexa or positive cytology B. Vaginal metastases STAGE II -Cervical stromal invasion STAGE III A. Invades serosa or adnexa B. Vaginal or parametrial involvement C1. Positive pelvic nodes C2. Positive aortic nodes C. Positive pelvic or aortic nodes STAGE IV A. Invades bladder or bowel mucosa B. Distant metastases, including intraabdominal or inguinal STAGE IV A. Invades bladder or bowel mucosa B. Distant metastases, including intraabdominal or inguinal Stage I New IA New IB Modified from Disaia, Clinical Gynecologic Oncology, sixth edition Stage II New II Modified from Disaia, Clinical Gynecologic Oncology, sixth edition Stage III New IIIC1 Modified from Disaia, Clinical Gynecologic Oncology, sixth edition New IIIC2 So What????? Survival outcomes Stage Distribution (%) 5 year survival Confined to uterus 69% 95.5% Regional spread (lymph nodes) 19% 67.5% Distant 8% 17.1% Unknown (unstaged) 4% 55.5% Treatment • Surgical Staging – Peritoneal Washings – Hyst/BSO – Pelvic and Paraaortic lymph nodes • Not sampling….lymphadenectomy is required – Option of minimally invasive surgery • LS, Robotic • Adjuvant Therapy Who to Surgical Stage? • Without Debate – Grade ≥ 2 lesions – Myometrial Invasion > ½ – Cervical extension – Extra-uterine spread – Serous, clear-cell, undifferentiated cell types or squamous – Enlarged lymph nodes ACOG Practice Bulletin • Who to surgically stage? – Most women should be staged – Exceptions “include young or perimenopausal women with grade 1 endometrioid adenocarcinoma associated with atypical hyperplasia and women at increased risk of mortality secondary to comorbidities.” ACOG Practice Bulletin No. 65. Obstet Gynecol 2005 And Why? Accuracy of pre-operative sampling • Pre-operative grade 1 endometrial cancer – The Ohio State experience • • • • Histology upgraded in 19% 18% (32/181) had stage II or greater Lymphatic metastases in 4% Extra-uterine disease in 10.5% Grade 1 – Overall 26% of patients were found to have high risk factors – MSKCC experience • Histology upgraded in 15% (+1.2% serous/clear cell) • 14% (69/490) had stage II or greater – Overall 18.5% of patients were found to have high risk factors – Affects ~ 20-25% of patients Ben-Shacar I, et al. Surgical staging for patients presenting with grade 1 endometrial carcinoma. Obstet Gynecol 2005;105:487-493. Leitao MM, et al. Accuracy of preoperative endometrial sampling diagnosis of FIGO grade 1 endometrial adenocarcinoma. Gynecol Oncol. 2008;111(2):244-8. NCCN National Comprehensive Cancer Network • Current Recommendations – Comprehensive surgical staging of all tumors greater than Grade I, IA – Consider comprehensive surgical staging of Grade I, IA • © National Comprehensive Cancer Network, Inc. 2009/2010. NCCN and NATIONAL COMPREHENSIVE CANCER NETWORK are registered trademarks of National Comprehensive Cancer Network, Inc. Minimally-invasive staging • GOG LAP2 – 2616 women with early EMCA – Randomized to laparoscopy vs laparotomy – Early endpoints: QoL, complications, staging – Later endpoints: PFS, OS Minimally-invasive staging • GOG LAP2 – Lpsc conversion rate ~25% – Lpsc may be safer • 14% vs 21% mod-severe postop events (P<0.001) – Lpsc is adequate for staging • Same rate of detection of advanced disease – Lpsc has lower pain scores – Lpsc had shorter hosp stay and faster return to work – Lpsc had overall improved QoL for first 6 mo Walker JL et al. J Clin Oncol 2009, 27:5331. Walker JL et al. J Clin Oncol 2009, 27:5337. Limitations of Laparoscopy • 2-D vision • Counterintuitive movements • Limited manipulation • Few degrees of freedom • Steep learning curve Robotic Surgery for Endometrial Cancer at OSU • Began Spring 2006 – 97 patients with endometrial carcinoma • 9% laparotomy required • 91% completed robotically – – – – 84 with pelvic and aortic LND 4 without LND (BMI range = 47-60) BMI = 34 kg/m2, LOS = 1 day One severe intraoperative complication – Robotic surgical staging for endometrial cancer is feasible Fowler JM et al. J Robotic Surg 2008 Endometrial Cancer Robotic (n=105) LS (n=76) Room Time 305 min 336 min Skin to Skin 242 min 287 min Staging 86% 89% 77% Conversion 10% 26% 23% BMI (kg/m2) 34 29 27 BMI >30 60% 38% BMI >40 26% 3% LOS 1 day 2 days 3% 18% Transfusion LAP2 Seamon LG et al. Gynecol Oncol 2008 Robotics and Obesity BMI Conversion 40 15% 45 24% 50 34% 55 48% Laparoscopy Outcome Robotic BMI Converted 40 Completed 34 Seamon LG et al. Obstet Gynecol 2008 and Gynecol Oncol 2009 Post Operative Treatment Uterine Risk Factors and Recurrence Rate Uterine Factor Recurrence Rate (%) Grade 1, 2, 3 4%, 9%, 16% Deep myometrial invasion Isthmus/cervix involvement Lympho/vascular space involvement 15% 16% 27% After surgical staging, which early stage patients benefit from further therapy? Intermediate risk • GOG 99 – Phase III RCT – 392 women – Staging with or without post-op WPRT – Defined “intermediate risk” • Stage IB, IC, IIA/IIB (occult) • 5 year recurrence rate of 20-25% • Excluded serous and clear cell Keys HM et al. Gynecol Oncol 2004 Adjuvant WPRT: GOG 99 No Adjuvant Adjuvant Treatment WPRT Progression 88% 96% Free : 2 yrs Survival: 3 yrs 89% 96% P Value 0.004 0.09 Keys HM et al. Gynecol Oncol 2004 PORTEC-2 • Phase III RCT • 427 women high-intermediate risk after hysterectomy • Randomized to WPRT vs vag brachy • Defined high-intermediate risk: 1) >60 y.o. stage IC gr 1-2 2) >60 y.o. stage IB gr 3 3) any age, stage IIA Nout RA et al. Lancet 2010 PORTEC-2 WPRT 1.6% VBT 1.8% P 0.74 Local recur 2.1% 5.1% 0.17 Distant mets 5.7% 8.3% 0.46 DFS (45 mo) 78% 83% 0.74 OS (45 mo) 80% 85% 0.57 Vaginal recur Nout RA et al. Lancet 2010 So how to treat high-intermediate risk? • GOG 249? Eligible: Stage I-IIA endometrial carcinoma, with high-intermediate risk factors Stage IIB (occult) endometrial carcinoma (any histology), with or without risk factors, and Stage I-IIB (occult) serous or clear cell endometrial carcinoma, with or without other risk features TREATMENT RANDOMIZATION Regimen I: Pelvic Radiation Therapy (4500/25 fractions-5040 cGY/28 fractions) over 5-6 weeks Optional Vaginal Cuff Boost ONLY for Stage II patients and Stage I patients with papillary serous and clear cell carcinomas OR Regimen II: Vaginal Cuff Brachytherapy + 3 cycles of chemotherapy consisting of Paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 (3hr) + Carboplatin AUC 6 q 21 days chemotherapy to start within 3 weeks of initiating brachytherapy Extra-Uterine Involvement • Stage IIIA • Stage IIIC • Stage IV Extra-uterine Risk Factors for Recurrence (%) Extra-uterine Factor Recurrence Rate Adnexal Metastasis 14 + Peritoneal Cytology 19 + Peritoneal Disease 25 Pelvic Nodal Metastases 28 Para-aortic Nodal Metastases 40 Advanced Disease • GOG 122 • RCT compared cis/adria (AP) vs WAI – 5 yr PFS 50% vs 38% for chemo arm – 5 yr OS 60% vs 43% for chemo arm • Recurrence Pelvic Extrapelvic WAI AP 13% 38% 18% 32% Remaining questions: -Best systemic chemotherapy? -Risk for local recurrence: role of combined chemoRT? Marcus E. Randall, et al; Randomized Phase III Trial of Whole-Abdominal Irradiation Versus Doxorubicin and Cisplatin Chemotherapy in Advanced Endometrial Carcinoma: A Gynecologic Advanced Disease • • • • • • GOG 184 Optimal stage III and IVA All received volume-directed RT cis/adria (AP) vs cis/adria/paclitaxel (TAP) 3 yr PFS 64% vs 62% Recurrence Local Distant 8% 28% Homesley H et al Gynecol Oncol 2009 Remaining questions • Systemic chemotherapy better than WAI for a systemic disease (GOG 122) • Most recurrences are systemic, not locoregional (GOG 122 and GOG 184) • Best chemotherapy: TAP no better than AP (GOG 184) • 16% of pts receiving volume-directed RT did not make it to chemotherapy (GOG 184) • TAP vs carbo/paclitaxel (GOG 209 – closed) • Role of RT in combination with chemo – GOG 258 – Carbo/paclitaxel (CT) x6 vs. RT + CT x4 Adjuvant Treatment Summary Stage/ Grade Low Risk Inter-mediate High Risk Risk IA G1/2 IA (G3) IB (all grades) IIA IIB Postoperative (complete surgical staging) None Vaginal Cuff Brachy Therapy or Observation (*exception is in stage IIB) Stage III Stage IV UPSC (all stages) CCC (all stages) Undiff (all stages) Chemotherapy consider RT (Vaginal Cuff Brachy Therapy vs. whole pelvic) Endometrial Cancer: James Cancer Hospital Treatment Recommendations Stage I, A-B; any grade No further therapy (NFT) +/- vaginal brachytherapy Stage II, any grade Radical hyst w/LND then observation Otherwise consider XRT Stage IIIA Individualized mgmt Stage IIIB-IVA Clinical trial Chemotherapy +/- XRT Stage IV B Clinical trial or chemotherapy Ovarian Cancer Gradual Therapy Changes Improve Survival SEER Cancer Statistics Review, 1975-2001 Ovarian Cancer Year Cases Deaths % 2006 20,180 15,310 76 2007 22,430 15,280 68 2008 21,650 15,520 71 2009 21,550 14,600 67 2010 21,880 13,850 63 Jemal A, et al. CA Cancer J Clin 2006-2010 Pathology Epithelial (65%) Serous (80%) – Tubal Mucinous (10%) – Intestinal Clear cell – Endocervical Endometrioid – Endometrial Brenner – Transitional cell Benign = Cystadenoma Invasive = Cystadenocarcinoma Borderline = Tumor of LMP Survival by Stage Stage Percent 5-year Survival I 24% 90% II 6% 80% III 55% 15-50% IV 15% 5-15% What is My Risk of Ovarian Cancer? Dx 61 61 yr -Ovarian CA Risk of Ovarian Cancer Baseline 1.5% risk 2+ relatives 3% risk One 1o relative 5% risk Two 1o relatives 7% risk BRCA2 mutation 25% risk BRCA1 mutation 40% risk Disease Volume Interventions to Mortality? Current point of diagnosis and initiation of treatment Prevention Screening Time Interventions to Mortality? Prevention – Pedigree Analysis – Medical: Oral Contraceptives – Surgical: Risk-Reducing Oophorectomy Screening – Pelvic Examination – Ultrasonography – CA125 and other (OvaSure) Serum Testing – Proteomics (OvaCheckTM) Screening – US and CA 125 “…there is no evidence available yet that the current screening modalities of CA 125 and ultrasonography can be effectively used for widespread screening to reduce mortality from ovarian cancer…” NIH Consensus Development Panel, 1994 Screening - OvaCheck TM “In the opinion of SGO, more research is needed to validate the test’s effectiveness before offering it to the public” Society of Gynecologic Oncologists, 2004 Screening - OvaSure TM “In the opinion of SGO, additional research is needed to validate the test’s effectiveness before offering it to women” Society of Gynecologic Oncologists, 2008 Ovarian Cancer Staging Stage I – Confined to the ovaries Stage II – Confined to the pelvis Stage III – Implants out of the pelvis or positive lymph nodes Stage IV – Distant metastases Positive pleural effusion or intraparenchymal liver disease Cytoreductive Surgery Goal is elimination of all tumor • No gross residual (microscopic) • Optimal (<1 cm) • Suboptimal (>1 cm) Operative Technique • Resection of urinary or intestinal tract Surgical Outcomes • Optimal in ~75% of cases • Does it matter? Does Cytoreduction Matter? Optimal Suboptimal Response Rate Clinical CR 95% 75% Pathologic CR 50% 25% Progression free interval (mo) 34 13 Survival (mo) 50 36 10-yr survival 35% 15% Stage IIIC Ovarian Cancer Microscopic – 40-75% Optimal – 30-40% Suboptimal – 5-10% Practical Management of Advanced Cancer Advanced (stage III or IV) Ovarian Cancer Surgical Candidate? Debulkable disease Medically fit Yes No Optimal Cytoreduction? (<1cm) Yes Chemotherapy No 3 cycles of chemotherapy, then consider interval cytoreduction, then complete chemotherapy Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy GCIG Collaboration 14 European centers, 1998-2006 718 patients with stage IIIC-IV EOC 670 randomized Primary surgery vs 3 cycles NACT Non-inferiority trial Primary endpoint: overall survival Secondary: PFS, QoL, adverse events Vergote I et al. New Engl J Med 2010; 363:943-55 Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Results Optimal cytoreduction: 42% vs 81% Adverse events higher in primary surgery arm NACT Hazard Ratio = 0.98 (P = 0.01 non-inf) Complete resection of all macroscopic disease was strongest predictor of overall survival Conclusion NACT followed by interval cytoreduction was not inferior to primary surgery Vergote I et al. New Engl J Med 2010; 363:943-55 Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Criticism Primary cytoreduction rate only 42% Survival lower than Long enrollment period GOG trials of suboptimal only patients Median PFS was only 12 months Median OS was only 29 months Were second-line therapies available to these patients? Takeaway Interesting, but unlikely to replace US standard Vergote I et al. New Engl J Med 2010; 363:943-55 How did we arrive at the current standard and what have we done to improve it? Primary Treatment of Ovarian Cancer Cyclophosphamide + Cisplatin STANDARD OF CARE 1995 1997 GOG 172 confirms IP therapy leads to a survival advantage compared with IV NEW STANDARD OF CARE? GOG 158 shows Taxol-carboplatin = TaxolCDDP, with improved toxicity and QoL 1999 2001 GOG 111 establishes Taxol-CDDP as standard 1st line SWOG 8501 demonstrates improved survival with IP therapy 2003 2005 2008 GOG 178 demonstrates improved DFS with longer duration of maintenance Taxol – No data on overall survival GOG 182 demonstrates no survival advantage to triplet or sequential doublet therapy Advanced Ovarian Cancer Median Survival: 1975 - 2005 80 57 52 months 60 20 (optimal) (optimal) 37 40 66 24 12 14 0 1975 Alkeran 1983 1986 multi-drug 1996 1998 cisplatin 2003 paclitaxel 2005 IP therapy GOG 158: Carboplatin vs. Cisplatin Arm 1 • FIGO stage III epithelial ovarian or peritoneal cancer • Optimal (<1 cm) cytoreduction R A N D O M I Z E Paclitaxel 135 mg/m2 24 hr IV q21 d x6 Cisplatin 75 mg/m2 IV D2 q 21 d x6 Arm 2 Paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 3 hr IV q21 d x6 Carboplatin AUC 7.5 IV D1 q21 d x6 Ozols RF et al. J Clin Oncol 2004;21:3194-200 GOG 158: Carboplatin vs. Cisplatin • Efficacy Median recurrence-free survival, mo Negative SLS, % • Toxicity More frequent with paclitaxel/cisplatin: P + CDDP 21.7 P + Carbo 22.0 45.2 51.5 More frequent with paclitaxel/carboplatin: – Grade IV neutropenia – Grade III/IV thrombocytopenia – Grade III/IV gastrointestinal – Grade I/II pain – Fever – Metabolic SLS = second-look surgery. Ozols RF et al. J Clin Oncol 2004;21:3194-200 Improvements in Primary Therapy • Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy • Weekly (dose-dense) taxanes ? • Bevacizumab consolidation ? Improvements in Primary Therapy: Intraperitoneal Therapy GOG 172 • FIGO stage III epithelial ovarian or peritoneal cancer • Optimal (<1 cm) cytoreduction IV R A N D O M I Z E Paclitaxel 135 mg/m2 24 hr IV q21 d x6 Cisplatin 75 mg/m2 IV D2 q 21 d x6 IP Paclitaxel 135 mg/m2 24 hr IV q21 d x6 Cisplatin 100 mg/m2 IP D2 q 21 d x6 Paclitaxel 60 mg/m2 IP D8 q 21 d x6 Armstrong DK. Proc Am Soc Clin Oncol 2002;21:201a. GOG 172: Intraperitoneal Therapy Significantly increased toxicity with IP: ● Neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, GI, renal, infection, fatigue, metabolic and pain Outcomes: ● RR recurrence 0.73 in IP arm compared with IV arm (23 versus 18 months, P=0.05) ● Overall survival 65 versus 49.7 months (P=0.03) ● Confirmed findings of SWOG 8501 and GOG 114 (survival advantage with IP therapy) Armstrong DK et al. N Engl J Med 2006 Intraperitoneal Therapy? GOG Trial Regimen PFI Median Survival GOG 104 IV: CDDP/CTX IP: CDDP/CTX Not reported Not reported 41 mo 49 mo Alberts et al Risk of Death Hazard Ratio = 0.76 GOG 114 Markman et al IV: CDDP/Taxol IP: CDDP then IV Carbo/Taxol x2 22mo 28 mo 52 mo. 63 mo Risk of Death Hazard Ratio = 0.81 GOG 172 Armstrong et al IV: Taxol/CDDP IP: Taxol/CDDP and IV Taxol 18 mo 23 mo 50 mo 65 mo Risk of Death Hazard Ratio = 0.73 Toxicity with IP chemotherapy • Presence of an IP catheter – Infection, fever • IP administration of chemotherapy – Abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting • Chemotherapy – Greater hematologic, metabolic, and neurologic toxicity Intravenous versus Intraperitoneal Administration of Cisplatin Pharmacokinetics IV CDDP 100 mg/m2 100 80 80 60 60 40 Plasma Peritoneal fluid AUC AUC 100 IP CDDP 90 mg/m2 Peritoneal fluid 40 20 20 0 0 Plasma Improvements in Primary Therapy: Weekly Taxane JGOG • FIGO stage II-IV EOC • Optimal or suboptimal • 1º endpoint = PFS • N = 631 Arm 1 R A N D O M I Z E Paclitaxel IV 180 mg/m2 q21 d x6 Carboplatin IV AUC 6 q 21 d x6 Arm 2 Paclitaxel IV 80 mg/m2 q7 d x18 Carboplatin IV AUC 6 q 21 d x6 Katsumata N et al. Lancet 2009;374:1331-1338 JGOG: Weekly Taxane • Rationale: – Duration of exposure is an important determinant of paclitaxel cytotoxicity – Preclinical evidence of anti-angiogenic effect • Results: – Median PFS longer in dose-dense (28 vs 17 mo) – 3 yr OS higher in dose dense (HR=0.75, P=0.03) – Heme and non-heme toxicities similar • Conclusions: – PFS and OS improved with dose-dense primary taxane therapy – GOG has incorporated weekly taxane arms in several trials Katsumata N et al. Lancet 2009;374:1331-1338 GOG 218 • FIGO stage III/IV epithelial ovarian or peritoneal cancer • Optimal/Suboptimal • 1º endpoint: PFS • N = 1873 Arm 1 R A N D O M I Z E Carboplatin IV AUC 6 (6 cycles) Paclitaxel IV 175 mg/m2 (6 cycles) Placebo IV (5 cycles) + maintenance placebo up to 15 mo Arm 2 Carboplatin IV AUC 6 (6 cycles) Paclitaxel IV 175 mg/m2 (6 cycles) Bevacizumab IV 15 mg/kg (5 cycles) + maintenance placebo up to 15 mo Arm 3 Carboplatin IV AUC 6 (6 cycles) Paclitaxel IV 175 mg/m2 (6 cycles) Bevacizumab IV 15 mg/kg (5 cycles) + maintenance bevacizumab up to 15 mo Burger R et al, ASCO 2010 GOG 218 Results Results: Women in Arm 3 (T/C/B + B) had median PFS 14 months compared to 10 months in Arm 1 (T/C); (HR = 0.72, P<0.0001) Women in Arm 2 (T/C/B) did not have significant increase in PFS compared to Arm 1 (T/C) Adverse events consistent with previous trials of bevacizumab Criticism: Is bevacizumab necessary with primary treatment if Arms 1 and 2 are similar? OS data not yet mature Burger R et al, ASCO 2010 ICON7 Arm 1 • FIGO stage II/IV epithelial ovarian or peritoneal cancer • Optimal/Suboptimal • 1º endpoint: PFS • N = 1528 R A N D O M I Z E Carboplatin IV AUC 6 (6 cycles) Paclitaxel IV 175 mg/m2 (6 cycles) Arm 2 Carboplatin IV AUC 6 (6 cycles) Paclitaxel IV 175 mg/m2 (6 cycles) Bevacizumab IV 15 mg/kg (5 cycles) + maintenance bevacizumab up to 15 mo *10/11/2010 Press release: PFS reduced by 15% at 12 months * Mature data will not be available for another 2 years Perren T et al, ESMO 2010 Response to Chemotherapy Overall response rate = 75-80% with chemotherapy 66% of patients will recur and die of their advanced ovarian cancer Treatment Options for Recurrent Ovarian Cancer • Chemotherapy – Cytotoxic – Empiric versus assay-directed – Non-cytotoxic (“targeted”) therapy – High-dose with marrow transplant • Surgery (2o cytoreduction) • Immunotherapy • Radiation therapy Secondary Cytoreduction Best Candidates Response to 1st line Rx DFI > 6-12 months Platinum sensitive Isolated recurrent disease Good performance status Further Rx options Previous optimal cytoreduction Poor Candidates Progressive disease Platinum resistant Short DFI Exhausted further Rx Poor surgical candidate Ascites Extensive disease Treatment-free Interval Response to Platinum Retreatment 10% RR 30% RR 50% RR 75% RR About 50% of recurrences are >6 months Platinum-Sensitive Recurrence • Recurrence diagnosed > 6 months from completion of primary therapy • Generally retreat with platinum combination • Evidence for both paclitaxel (ICON4) and gemcitabine (AGO-OVAR) in combination with carboplatin • New evidence for carboplatin-PLD Platinum-Sensitive Recurrence • GCIG – – – – – – European consortium RCT non-inferiority trial 976 women with plat-sensitive recurrence Carboplatin + PLD vs carboplatin + paclitaxel Primary endpoint: PFS Results: • PFS superior in PLD arm (HR=0.82, P=0.005) • Severe non-heme tox higher in paclitaxel arm Pujade-Lauraine E et al. J Clin Oncol 2010;28:3323-3329 GOG 213: Doublets for Recurrence RANDOMIZATION •Epithelial ovarian cancer or primary peritoneal cancer •Recurrent disease •Platinum sensitive •+/- Cytoreduction I Paclitaxel Doublet Carboplatin Paclitaxel II Docetaxel Doublet Carboplatin Docetaxel III Doxil Doublet Carboplatin Doxil IV Gemcitabine Doublet Carboplatin Gemcitabine V Topotecan Doublet Carboplatin Topotecan Sequential Doublet VI Carboplatin Sequential Doublet Paclitaxel To treat or not to treat…. Early vs delayed treatment of recurrent ovarian cancer • MRC OV05/EORTC 55955 – 9 European centers – RCT of 1442 women of EOC in complete remission – Clinical exam and CA125 q 3 mo – Pts/investigators blinded to these results – If CA125 >2X ULN, pt randomized to early treatment (within 28 days) or delayed treatment (not until clinical or symptomatic relapse) – 529 women randomized: 265 early, 264 delayed – Primary endpoint: overall survival Rustin GJS et al. Lancet 2010;376:1155-1163 Early vs delayed treatment of recurrent ovarian cancer • Results – No difference in overall survival (HR = 0.98) • Conclusions – Value of routine CA125 measurement not proven • Criticism – Long enrollment (1996-2005) – Large number of early stage (20%) but overall survival poor (26-27 mo from randomization) – Contemporary therapy for recurrence not available to many patients • Takeaway – Provocative, but not likely to be uniformly adopted Rustin GJS et al. Lancet 2010;376:1155-1163 The Future? PARP inhibitors Imatinib TKIs