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Lessons From Clinical Trials of Targeted Therapies for Cancer George W. Sledge M.D. Indiana University Simon Cancer Center What is Targeted Therapy? • Well-defined molecular target • Target is correlated with tumor biology • Target is measurable in the clinic, or so common it doesn’t need to be • Target is correlated with therapeutic effect The HER Family of Receptors Ligands TGF-α EGF Epiregulin Betacellulin HB-EGF Amphiregulin No ligandbinding activity* Heregulin Ligandbinding domain Tyrosine kinase domain Erb-B1 HER1 EGFR *HER2 dimerizes with other members of the HER family. Roskoski. Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2004;319:1. Rowinsky. Annu Rev Med. 2004;55:433. Erb-B2 HER2 neu Erb-B3 HER3 Heregulin (neuregulin-1) Epiregulin HB-EGF Neuregulins-3, -4 Erb-B4 HER4 Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization Test Measures HER2 Gene Amplification Chromosome 17 centromere HER2 gene HER2-normal Ratio <2.0 HER2-amplified Ratio ≥2.0 • FISH tests are designed to detect amplification of the HER2 gene PathVysion® PI. Revised May 2004. Disease-Free Survival ACTH 87% 85% ACT 75% % 67% ACT ACTH N Events 1679 261 1672 134 HR=0.48, 2P=3x10-12 Years From Randomization B31/N9831 Targets for which Targeted Therapies exist • Steroid receptors: for ER+ breast cancer, prostate cancer, and lymphoma • HER2: for breast and gastric ca • ALK: for NSCLC • CD20: for lymphoma • bcr/Abl: for CML • c-Kit: for GIST • Hedgehog: for basal cell and medulloblastoma • RET: for medullary thyoid ca • b-RAF: for melanoma Sort-of Targeted Therapy • VEGF-targeted therapies (except renal cell ca) – rarely drives tumor; hard to predict benefit • EGFR (colon, lung, H&N ca) – ras, EGFR mutations • CMF chemotherapy in high RS breast cancer – redefining targted therapy? EGF Receptor: Role in CRC Therapy Ligand Antibodies to EGFR cetuximab, panitumumab PI3K pY pY PTEN pY pY RAS RAF EGFR-TK MEK STAT AKT MAPK mTOR Gene transcription Cell-cycle progression Proliferation Survival (anti-apoptosis) Chemotherapy / radiotherapy resistance Angiogenesis Invasion and metastasis Meyerhardt & Mayer, N Engl J Med 2005 Venook, Oncologist 2005 Progression-free survival by treatment within KRAS groups Mutant – 7.4 vs 7.3 weeks Wild type – 12.3 vs. 7.3 weeks P= <0.0001 Amado, R. G. et al. J Clin Oncol; 26:1626-1634 2008 Copyright © American Society of Clinical Oncology Oncotype DX 21 Gene Recurrence Score (RS) Assay 16 Cancer and 5 Reference Genes From 3 Studies PROLIFERATION Ki-67 STK15 Survivin Cyclin B1 MYBL2 ESTROGEN ER PR Bcl2 SCUBE2 GSTM1 INVASION Stromolysin 3 Cathepsin L2 HER2 GRB7 HER2 RS = + 0.47 x HER2 Group Score - 0.34 x ER Group Score + 1.04 x Proliferation Group Score + 0.10 x Invasion Group Score + 0.05 x CD68 - 0.08 x GSTM1 - 0.07 x BAG1 BAG1 CD68 REFERENCE Beta-actin GAPDH RPLPO GUS TFRC Category RS (0 – 100) Low risk RS < 18 Int risk RS ≥ 18 and < 31 High risk RS ≥ 31 Rate of Distant Recurrence at 10 years Recurrence Score and Distant Recurrence-Free Survival Low RS < 18 Rec. Rate = 6.8% C.I. = 4.0% - 9.6% 40 35 Intermediate RS 18 - 31 Rec. Rate = 14.3% C.I. = 8.3% - 20.3% High RS 31 Rec. Rate = 30.5% C.I. = 23.6% - 37.4% 30 25 20 15 Recurrence Rate 95% C.I. 10 5 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Recurrence Score 35 40 45 50 Paik .S. et al. N Engl J Med 2004;351:2817-26 B-20: Absolute % Increase in DRFS at 10 Years • Benefit of Chemo Depends on RS n = 353 Low RS<18 n = 134 Int RS18-30 n = 164 High RS≥31 0 10% 20% 30% 40% % Increase in DRFS at 10 Yrs (mean ± SE) Targeted Therapies Vary in Effectiveness • Based on degree of “pathway addiction” – Is there an ideal target? • Based on drug-related issues The Ideal Target? • • • • Driving mutation in a “Dumb tumor” that is Easily druggable and the mutation is really common Dumb Tumors vs. Smart Tumors • CML, MTC, GIST • Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: – Responses to EGFR and ALK-targeted therapy seen predominantly in non-smokers – Bronchial epithelium of smokers are loaded with mutations (~1 mutation/cell/3 cigarettes) • Breast Cancer: ER-neg vs. ER-pos – BRCA and BRCA-ness of TNBC; large mutational load – ER-pos: less LOH, more well-differentiated Clinical Trial Implications of Biomarker-Driven Therapy • Number needed to study vs. Number needed to treat: a source of tension • Laboratory implications that follow from this A Simulation of a Phase III Trial: Assumptions: Two subgroups (A and B) A is sensitive to targeted therapy and will have a 25% improvement in median survival from 2227 mo. B is insensitive to targeted therapy Three scenarios: A representing 100, 50, and 25% of the study population. The Crizotinib Story: How It’s Supposed to Work Crizotinib: Rationale for Development of a c-MET inhibitor • c-MET is potentially one of the most frequently genetically altered receptor tyrosine kinases in human cancers – Activating mutations • Hereditary papillary RCC: 100%, sporadic papillary RCC (13%) • HNSCC: 10% • NSCLC (8%) and SCLC (13%) – Gene amplification • Gastric carcinoma: 5-10% • Colorectal carcinoma: 4% primary tumors, 20% liver metastases • Esophageal adenocarcinoma: 5-10% • Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (ALK) (2 target for crizotinib) – Anaplastic lymphoma is very sensitive to chemotherapy – ALK point mutations and gene amplification are implicated in neuroblastoma … a rare tumor – ALK translocations in inflammatory myofibroblastic tumors … a very rare tumor Crizotinib: Kinase Inhibition Profile Upstate 102 kinase Kinase Met(h) Tie2(h) TrkA(h) ALK(h) TrkB(h) Abl(T315I)(h) Yes(h) Lck(h) Rse(h) [SKY] Axl(h) Fes(h) Lyn(h) Arg(m) Ros(h) CDK2/cyclinE(h) Fms(h) EphB4(h) Bmx(h) EphB2(h) Fgr(h) Fyn(h) IR(h) CDK7/cyclinH/MAT1(h) cSRC(h) IGF-1R(h) Aurora-A(h) Syk(h) FGFR3(h) PKCµ(h) BTK(h) CDK1/cyclinB(h) p70S6K(h) PRK2(h) PAR-1Bα(h) PKBß(h) Ret(h) GSK3ß(h) Flt3(h) MAPK1(h) ZAP-70(h) Abl(h) c-RAF(h) PKD2(h) ROCK-II(h) Rsk3(h) GSK3α(h) CDK5/p35(h) PDGFRα(h) Rsk1(h) SGK(h) CHK1(h) ErbB4(h) Rsk2(h) JNK1α1(h) PKBα(h) Blk(m) CDK3/cyclinE(h) PKCι(h) PKCθ(h) CDK2/cyclinA(h) PAK2(h) PKCßI(h) Pim-1(h) PKCη(h) SAPK4(h) CaMKII(r) MKK7ß(h) CaMKIV(h) CHK2(h) CK2(h) JNK2α2(h) MKK6(h) CK1δ(h) PKCα(h) MAPK2(h) MEK1(h) PKCδ(h) PKCε(h) Plk3(h) PKCßII(h) MSK1(h) PDGFRß(h) PKCζ(h) SAPK3(h) MAPKAP-K2(h) PKA(h) AMPK(r) CDK6/cyclinD3(h) CSK(h) SAPK2a(h) JNK3(h) PKBγ(h) IKKα(h) NEK2(h) % Inhibition 94 103 102 100 100 98 96 95 94 93 93 93 91 90 87 84 80 79 77 73 68 64 58 58 56 54 52 50 50 35 25 24 22 21 21 21 18 17 17 17 16 16 15 14 14 11 10 10 7 6 5 5 5 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 0 0 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -2 -2 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -5 -6 -6 -6 -6 -7 -7 -9 -9 -9 -9 -10 -10 -11 -11 Cellular selectivity on 10 of 13 relevant hits 13 kinase “hits” <100X selective for c-MET Crizotinib (PF-02341066) Kinase IC50 (nM) mean* Selectivity ratio c-MET 8 – ALK 20 2X 298 34X 189 22X 294 34X 322 37X Tie-2 448 52X Selectivity findings Trk A 580 67X Trk B 399 46X • ALK and c-MET inhibition at clinically relevant dose levels Abl 1,159 166X IRK 2,887 334X Lck 2,741 283X Sky >10,000 >1,000X VEGFR2 >10,000 >1,000X PDGFR >10,000 >1,000X RON Axl • Low probability of pharmacologically relevant inhibition of any other kinase at clinically relevant dose levels *The cellular kinase activities were measured using ELISA capture Pfizer Inc. Data on file A8081001: Phase I Trial of Crizotinib Cohort 5 300 mg BID MDZ sub-study Cohort 4 Cohort 6 250 mg BID MTD/RP2D 200 mg BID Cohort 3 200 mg QD Cohort 2 100 mg QD Cohort 1 MDZ sub-study 50 mg QD MTD = Maximum tolerated dose; RP2D = Recommended phase 2 dose MDZ = Midazolam (in-vitro data indicated that PF-02341066 Kwak EL, et al. ESMO/ECCO 2009 is a major substrate and inhibitor of CYP3A activity) (Abstract G6 and oral presentation) Adverse Events (≥10%): Dose Escalation Cohorts (N=37) Adverse event Grade 50 mg QD 100 mg QD 200 mg QD (n=3) (n=4) (n=8) 200 mg BID 300 mgBID (n=7) (n=6) 250 mg BID (n=9) 1–2 1–2 1–2 3 1–2 1–2 3 1–2 3 Nausea 2 3 6 0 3 4 0 4 0 Vomiting 2 2 5 0 2 2 0 3 0 Diarrhea 3 0 1 0 2 0 0 2 0 Fatigue 2 2 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 Headache 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 Visual disturbance 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 ALT increased 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 AST increased 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 DLTs 3 objective responses observed in this part of the Phase I trial Kwak EL, et al. ASCO 2009 (Abstract 3509 and oral presentation) First Description of EML4-ALK Translocation in NSCLC Evidence for EML4-ALK as a Lung Cancer Oncogene • Insertion of EML4-ALK into NIH 3T3 fibroblasts was tumorigenic when implanted subcutaneously into nude mice • Engineered the specific expression of EML4-ALK fusion gene in lung progenitor cells using a surfactant protein C gene promoter • 100% of EML4-ALK transgenic mice developed lung adenocarcinoma that were + for ALK by IHC. No other primary cancers were observed. • Following IV injection of EML4-ALK/3T3 cells into nude mice, all developed lung cancer. Ten animals were treated with an ALK-specific TKI and 10 were observed: Key Collaboration Pfizer and Massachusetts General Hospital • Of the 3 objective responders, all had ALK translocations: – Inflammatory myofibroblastic sarcoma: NPM-ALK translocation – NSCLC (2): EML4-ALK translocation Kwak EL, et al. ESMO/ECCO 2009 (Abstract G6 and oral presentation) Clinical and Demographic Features of Patients with ALK-positive NSCLC Mean (range) age, years Gender, male/female 0 Performance 1 status,* n (%) 2 3 Race, n (%) Smoking history, n (%) Histology, n (%) Prior treatment regimens, n (%) Caucasian N=82 51 (25–78) 43/39 24 (29) 44 (54) 13 (16) 1 (1) Asian Never smoker Former smoker Current smoker 46 (56) 29 (35) 62 (76) 19 (23) 1 (1) Adenocarcinoma 79 (96) Squamous Other 0 1 2 ≥3 Not reported 1 (1) 2 (2) 5 (6) 27 (33) 15 (18) 34 (41) 1 (1) Y Bang et al: ASCO 2010 Tumor Responses to Crizotinib for Patients with ALK-positive NSCLC Objective RR = 57% 60 Maximum change in tumor size (%) (95% CI: 46-68%) 40 DCR (CR+PR+SD): 87% (95% CI: 77-93%) 20 Progressive disease Stable disease Confirmed partial response Confirmed complete response 0 –20 –30% –40 –60 –80 –100 * *Partial response patients with 100% change have non-target disease present Y Bang et al: ASCO 2010 77% of Patients with ALK-positive NSCLC Remain on Crizotinib Treatment Individual patients • Reasons for discontinuation – Related AEs 1 – Non-related AEs 1 – Unrelated death 2 – Other 2 – Progression 13 0 3 6 9 12 15 18 21 Treatment duration (months) N=82; red bars represent discontinued patients Y Bang et al: ASCO 2010 Progression-free survival probability Median PFS Has Not been Reached 1.00 PFS probability at 6 months: 72% (95% CI: 61, 83%) 0.75 0.50 0.25 Median follow-up for PFS: 6.4 months (25–75% percentile: 3.5–10 months) 95% Hall–Wellner confidence bands 0.00 0 2.5 5.0 7.5 10.0 12.5 Progression-free survival (months) 15.0 17.5 Y Bang et al: ASCO 2010 Current Crizotinib Clinical Trials PROFILE 1007 Key entry criteria ● Positive for ALK by central laboratory ● 1 prior chemotherapy (platinum-based) R A N D O M I Z E N=318 Crizotinib 250 mg BID (n=159) administered on a continuous dosing schedule Pemetrexed 500 mg/m2 or docetaxel 75 mg/m2 (n=159) infused on day 1 of a 21-day cycle PROFILE 1005 Key entry criteria ● Positive for ALK by central laboratory ● Progressive disease in Arm B of study A8081007 Crizotinib 250 mg BID (N=250) N=250 administered on a continuous dosing schedule ● >1 prior chemotherapy PROFILE 1007: NCT00932893; PROFILE 1005: NCT00932451 Crizotinib: The Good News • Important unmet medical need • Straightforward, biology-based biomarker predicting response • High response rate in heavily pre-treated patients (i.e., low NNT) • Relatively non-toxic A triumph for targeted therapy Crizotinib as an Example: The Bad News • 4-5% of Non Small Cell Lung Cancer, so… – 20-25 patients screened for every EML4-ALK+ patient – Not all patients are trial eligible – Not all patients give informed consent – Best guess: 50+ patients screened for every patient entered on trial – Screening = FISH, which requires trained lab tech, time, and supply money – Lab requires CLIA certification A Thought Experiment: Imagine ALK in Esophageal Cancer • Esophageal cancer = 16,640 cases/year, with 14,500 deaths • Assume ALK-like rates of gene expression of 5% • .05 X 16,640 = 832 patients/year in the US • Only 3% of patients with cancer go onto clinical trials • .03 X 832 = 25 patients/year entering trial Medullary Thyroid Cancer •Thyroid cancer: 2% of all cancers •MTC: 5% of all thyroid cancers •RET proto-oncogene mutations drive all hereditary MTC and ~50% of sporadic •RTKi’s for RET exist Vandetanib • Inhibits VEGFR1,2, and RET • A dud in lung cancer • ASCO 2010: Phase III trial of 331 MTC patients – 54% reduction in rate of progression, p = 0.0001 – ORR 45% vs. 13% • International trial required; accrued in 1 year • NB: the “biomarker” was the diagnosis of MTC It Gets Worse Multiple kinases are activated Optimal cell kill requires inhibition of multiple kinases Stommel et al. SCIENCE VOL 318: 287,2007 It Gets Worse • Assume: Cancers have multiple drivers • Targeting multiple RTK’s increases benefit • So now imagine esophageal cancers with two drivers, requiring two different targeted therapies • What is the number needed to screen to perform a trial of a combination of 2 RTKi’s? Number Needed to Study: A New Concept for Biomarker-Driven Clinical Research • NNS = ___________1________ (fraction with biomarker X assay specificity X fraction trial-eligible X fraction giving informed consent X) Example: HER2+ = 1/(0.25 X 0.9 X 0.5 X 0.5) = 17.8 patients screened/patient entered into trial NNS Implications • Fraction with biomarker is fixed by biology • Maximize true positives (specificity) by optimized assay development • Minimize number of exclusion criteria • Make trial as user-friendly as possible for patients Problems With Biomarker Studies • • • • • • Poor study design Lack of assay reproducibility Specimen availability issues Issues with quantity, quality & preservation Variability in assay results Underpowered studies/overly optimistic reporting due to multiple testing, subset analyses & cut point optimization McShane, LM et al. J Clin Oncol 23: 9067-72, 2005 Assay & Marker Space Phase of Trial: Preclinical 0 I II III IV Discovery Clinical Practice Pharmacokinetic Pharmacodynamic Prognostic CLIA Predictive Pharmacogenomic Research Lab Clinical Lab If Assay Used For Individual Patient Decision Making Assess feasibility of detection/assay technology and marker prevalence Marker/technology discovery Assess assay performance in context: reproducibility, sensitivity, specificity, etc. Final late stage Test cut-points in new retrospective development, assay qualification specimen set Set preliminary cutpoints Test biomarker in retrospective set of specimens Trial activation NCI Clinical Assay Development Program Clinical Assay Development Network (CADN) Patient Characterization Center (PCC) Clinical Assay Development Center (CADC) Specimen Retrieval System/caHUB CADP: overarching program to move assays from research to the clinic CADN: network of CLIA certified labs providing services, including assay optimization, assessment of analytical performance, clinical validity in context of clinical trials PCC: internal lab performing gene expression profiling and somatic mutation detection using semiquantitative NextGen sequencing on newly diagnosed cancers CADC: internal lab, part of CADN, the assay development arm of PCC; develop “high risk” standardized assays that can be disseminated Why Drugs Fail Failure Rates of Investigational Drugs in Clinical Trials • 9 of 10 drugs entering Phase 1 clinical trials will fail Historical timing of drug development failures • 10% discontinuation in Phase 1 • 50-60% discontinuation in Phase 2 • 20-35% discontinuation in Phase 3 Why “Targeted” Agents Fail • • • • • The drug isn’t a drug The drug isn’t used correctly The drug is used in the wrong disease Too much is asked of the drug The drug is too toxic The Drug isn’t a Drug: SU5416 SU5416 • Potent, selective inhibitor of VEGFR2 • Preclinical activity in animal models • Additivity/synergy with chemotherapeutics SU5416: not a drug, a rock • High lipophilicity (Log P= 4.4), an extremely low aqueous solubility (< 10 ng/ml at pH 2-13) and low solubility in common pharmaceutically acceptable organic solvents (i.e., ethanol, PEG 400, propylene glycol, etc.) • Rapid clearance (half-life < 1 hour) • Major metabolites are inactive 18FDG-PET of patient with GIST treated initially with SU5416 and later with imatinib mesylate. Pre- and posttreatment with SU5416 Pre- and posttreatment with imatinib Heymach et al, CCR, 2004 The Drug Isn’t Used Right: PTK-787/ZK 225846 (Vatalanib) PTK/ZK-787 - Oral VEGF Receptor Inhibitor Receptor PTK/ZK IC50, M* VEGFR-2 (KDR) 0.037 VEGFR-1 (Flt-1) 0.077 PDGF- VEGFR-3 (Flt-4) c-kit 0.58 0.66 0.73 * in vitro • Potent inhibitor of VEGFR-1 and 2 tyrosine kinases – Also inhibits VEGFR-3 and the PDGF- and c-kit receptors Wood JM, et al. Cancer Research, 2000;60:2178-2189. DCE-MRI of PTK-787 A B Enhancement of a liver metastasis at baseline (A) and 30 hours (B) after treatment with PTK/ZK CONFIRM-1 Trial Design 1168 Patients Stratification Factors: PS: 0, 1-2 LDH: ≤, >1.5 x ULN R A N D O M I Z E D FOLFOX 4 + PTK/ZK 1250 mg po qd FOLFOX 4 + Placebo Multinational randomized phase III trial in previously untreated mCRC: Negative! Why Didn’t it Work? One Possible Answer “The MTD of PTK/ZK administered is 750 mg bid. The DCE-MRI suggests that the biologically active dose of PTZ/ZK is at least 1000 mg/day. Thomas, AL et al. J Clin Oncol 23: 4162-71, 2005. “Pharamacokinetic data from this study show that at equivalent daily doses, drug exposure is comparable with the previous once daily-dosing study; however, the trough levels are significantly higher with the bid dosing. Whether this will translate into improved efficacy is at this time unknown.” The Drug is Used in the Wrong Disease • Bevacizumab in pancreatic cancer Locally advanced/metastatic pancreatic cancer: CALGB 80303 Gemcitabine 1000mg/m2 d1 8 15 q28d Placebo Locally advanced or metastatic Pancreatic Ca R N=602 Primary endpoint: •Overall survival Gemcitabine 1000mg/m2 d1 8 15 q28d Bevacizumab 10mg/kg d1 d15 q28d Secondary endpoints: • objective response rate, duration of response, progression-free survival, toxicity Trial closed by DSMB as crossed futility boundary Kindler et al ASCO 2007 Locally advanced/metastatic pancreatic cancer CALGB 80303 Gemcitabine Placebo Gemcitabine Bevacizumab CR (%) 2 1 PR (%) 8 10 SD (%) 31 36 Disease control rate (%) 40 47 Median OS (months) 6.1 5.8 P=0.78 PFS (months) 4.7 4.9 P=0.99 1yr OS (%) 20 18 Kindler et al ASCO 2007 Is Pancreatic Cancer Inherently Resistant to Anti-VEGF Therapy? • Hypovascularized with dense stroma • Pre-adapted to survive hypoxia • Frequent TP53 inactivating mutations, which render tumors insensitive to hypoxia The power of NORMAL The tale of 3 therapies in TNBC… Treatment Target Rationale (prior data) Tumor vs Tumor Next-Gen Transcriptome Tumor vs Normal Next-Gen Fold Change/ P-value Clinical Trial Outcome Cetuximab & Gefitinib EGFR Overexpression of EGFR Not Overexpressed -1.61 (p= 0.09) NEGATIVE Imatinib c-KIT Overexpression of c-KIT Not Overexpressed BSI-201 PARP Overexpression Overexpressed of PARP/Synthetic lethality in DNA repair -6.82 NEGATIVE (p= 1.8E-06) 3.97 (p = 2.0E-05) POSITIVE ASCO-Plenary; 2009 PARP inhibitor: Overall Survival BSI-201 + Gem/Carbo (n = 57) Median OS = 9.2 months Gem/Carbo (n = 59) Median OS = 5.7 months P = 0.0005 HR = 0.348 (95% CI, 0.189-0.649) While other reasons may explain these trial results…. Finding genes that are differentially expressed maybe a good start…. O’Shaughnessy et al Too Much is Asked of the Drug • Sunitinib in breast cancer Sunitinib and Capecitabine in Advanced Breast Cancer • Sunitinib – All prior A and T – RR = 11% (4-21) – Median TTP = 10w (1011) – MDR = 19 w (18-20) • Capecitabine – All prior A, and T-resistant – RR = 20% (14-28) – Median TTP = 3.1 mo – MDR = 8.1 mo Blum et al. J Clin Oncol 17: 485-93, 1999 Burstein et al. J Clin Oncol 26: 1810-16, 2008 Results of SUN1107 Sunitinib Capecitabine Median PFS 2.8 mo 4.2 mo Hazard Ratio 1.47 p value 0.002 Clinical Benefit (%) 19.3 27.0 MDR (mo) 6.9 9.3 Any SAE (%) 30 17 SUN1007: Shooting for the Fence? • Capecitabine actually works in MBC – it shrinks tumors – it has easily manageable toxicity • Sunitinib had a lower TTP, RR, and TTP in Phase II in a similar patient population • Stats require huge sunitinib benefit: 33% increase in PFS • Why would one expect this to work? Conclusions • Many of our trials fail for simple reasons: – the drug isn’t a drug – the drug isn’t used right – the drug is used in the wrong disease/setting – too much is asked of the drug • We owe it to our patients to avoid unforced errors Avoiding Unforced Errors • • • • Get dose and schedule more or less right Spend $$ on PK/PD (including combinations) Don’t ignore Phase II data sets Respect the disease – Its unique biology – Its therapeutic context “The race is not always to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, but that’s the the way to bet.” Damon Runyan 20th Century American Philosopher Thank You Laissez les bon temps rouler!