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Postęp w onkologii - nowe techniki, nowe leki Radosław Mądry Katedra i Klinika Onkologii Uniwersytety Medycznego im. K. Marcinkowskiego w Poznaniu Cancer Treatment Today • Surgery • Radiation • Systemic treatment: – – – – Cytotoxic Chemotherapy Hormone therapy Immunotherapy Non-cytotoxic therapy 3 Stanley B. Kaye Progress in the treatment of ovarian cancer. Lessons from Homologous Recombination 10th International Symposium Advanced Ovarian Cancer: Optimal Therapy. Update Valencia, Hiszpania, 6 Marca 2015 4 Long Term Survival (%) • • • • • • • • Leukemia in children Leukemia in adults Bone cancer Testicular cancer Breast cancer Non-small cell lung cancer Colon cancer Hodgkin’s disease 1970 0 0 5 0 40 0 30 10 2008 80 45 60 80 85 15 60 85 From Lab….. To Clinical Trials…. To Standard Practice Laboratory data Effective Therapy Drug Development • Identification of new agents • Preclinical requirements: efficacy, toxicology (ICH) • Formulation, manufacturing • Regulatory (government) review (IND submission) • Phase I, II, III clinical trials • Regulatory (government) review (NDS = new drug submission) Anticancer Drug Discovery • Mechanism based – Rational synthesis or discovery of agents targeting mechanisms of malignant behavior. Then test in laboratory models • Screening/Compound based – Screen new chemical entities for activity in cancer models in the laboratory. Then discover mechanisms of action. Screening/Compound Based Discovery • Majority of available anticancer drugs have been identified by screening • Sources: plants (vincas, taxanes) microbes (doxorubicin) chemicals (cisplatin) • Most act by interfering with molecular process of cell division. Therefore, many normal tissues will be affected. Preclinical Requirements A new drug must have completed the following prior to patient testing: • • • • • Demonstration of efficacy in tumor models Toxicology testing: 2 species (rodent and non-rodent) Formulation and manufacturing Animal pharmacokinetics Mechanism of action studies Preclinical Evaluation of Cytotoxic Agents IN VITRO Mechanism of action IN VIVO Stage I Stage II Target level Maximum tolerated dose Spectrum of activity Cellular level Dose-limiting toxicities Schedule dependency Efficacy Route of administration Cross resistance Combination therapies Human Tumor in Nude Mouse Moving a New Therapy from the Lab to the Clinic Clinical Evaluation Laboratory Experiments River of Unknowns Clinical Trials • Phase I • Phase II • Phase III Phase I Trials: Important issues What kind of purpose (goals) To determine the appropriate dose for phase II evaluation Dose Limiting toxicity (DLT) Those toxic effects that by nature of their severity limit further dose escalation Maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) That dose producing a certain frequency of DLT within the treated population Eisenhauer EA et al, J Clin Oncol 2000; 18: 684-692 Phase I Design: Selection of Starting Dose • Based on mouse toxicity: – 0.1 Mouse Equivalent LD10 (MELD10) • In instances where dog toxicity show this dose to be toxic, 1/3 Toxic Dose Low (TDL) in dogs is selected as starting dose Phase I Trials • Find highest safe dose (1 level below MTD) • Identify side effects Dose Severe toxicity Recommended dose 3 pts 3 pts 3 pts 3 pts 3 pts 3 pts Dose escalating by modified Fibonacci Modified Fibonacci Escalation Dose Level Theory Example x 1 level 2 2 x level 1 2 level 3 1.67 x level 2 3.3 level 4 1.5 x level 3 5 level 5 1.4 x level 4 6.7 level 6 1.33 x level 5 8.8 level 7 1.33 x level n-1 - starting Dose 19 Phase II Trials • Screen drug for activity in cancer patients • Use recommended dose • Test it in 15-30 patients with same tumor type • Look for objective tumor shrinkage: Partial or Complete Response RECIST Guidelines: Response Criteria • Target lesions ( LD / LD baseline) – – – – CR PR: 30% (50% surf. area and 65% volume) SD PD: 20% (44% surf. area and 73% volume) • Non-target lesions – CR (including markers) – Non-CR – PD New Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors: Revised RECIST Guidelines (version 1.1) E.A. Eisenhauer, et al. European Journal of Cancer 2009; 45: 228-247 RECIST 1.1 • Measurable lesions defined by unidimensional measurement • Tumor burden based on sum of diameters • Categories of response: – – – – CR PR (30% decrease in sum from baseline) SD PD (20% increase in sum from nadir) Courtesy of E.A. Eisenhauer Summary RECIST 1.0 RECIST 1.1 Measuring tumor burden 10 targets 5 per organ 5 targets 2 per organ Lymph node Measure long axis as for other lesions. Silent on normal size Measure short axis. Define normal size. Progression definition 20% increase in sum 20% increase and at least 5 mm absolute increase Non-measurable disease PD “must be unequivocal” Expanded definition to convey impact on overall burden of disease. Confirmation required Required when response primary endpoint— but not PFS New lesions -- New section which includes comment on FDG PET interpretation Maximum % Change in Tumor Shrinkage (Stage 1) Investigator Assessment Randomized set; adjusted mean change. Only patients with baseline and at least one post-baseline measurement are included. Inhibitory PARP u chorych na raka jajnika będących nosicielami mutacji BRCA1/2 26 27 28 29 What is Efficacy? • Response Efficacy • Efficacy is improved: – Cure rates – Survival – Quality of life: i.e. meaningful symptom palliation • “Response” is a measure of biologic effect which may be a marker for efficacy 2014 31 32 33 Phase III Trials Once a new agent has shown activity in phase II, comparative trials are usually designed. New agent can be given alone or in combination • Objectives: Compare “new” to “standard” • Endpoints: Survival, toxicity, quality of life. • Sample Size: 200-2000 patients Phase III Trials: Definitive Tests of Efficacy • Large studies to detect “significant” differences in outcomes of interest: – Cure, survival, quality of life • Randomized design: – Allows unbiased assessment of treatment effect • Sample Size: – Determines power with which one can detect postulated differences How Much Improvement in Efficacy? • Critical question which drives: – Trial design and sample size – Eventual change in practice • Patients and physicians (staff) differ on degree of improvement which must be seen to choose a more toxic therapy. • If patients views are accepted: many trials are too small (underpowered). 37 38 39 40 41 ! Bez korzyści Bez korzyści 43 44 45 2014 46 47 48 49 ORR = objective response rate; PD = progressive disease; PFS = progression-free survival; aEpithelial ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer bStratification factors: selected chemotherapy; prior anti-angiogenic therapy; platinum-free interval (<3 vs 3–6 months) cOr 10 mg/kg q2w. d15 mg/kg q3w, permitted on clear evidence of PD 50 51 52 GOG 172 CISPLATYNA/PAKLITAKSEL IV vs. IP PFS +5,5 m n = 415 FIGO III, < 1 cm p=0,05 6x PC (like GOG111) vs. 6x Paclitaxel IV d1+Cisplatin IP d2 + Paclitaxel IP d8 (100 mg) Only 42% with 6 courses IP +15,9 m p=0,03 OS IV IP PFS 18 24 Survival 50 66 53 Armstrong et al, N Engl J Med., 2006 JCO March 23, 2015 Survival IV IP 51,4 61,8 54 Dziękuje 55