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Symptom Benefit Working group Chicago, Thursday, May 29, 2014 02:00-04:00 Chairs: F Joly, Co-Chair J McAlpine Renewal Chair and co-chair • Chair : F Joly • Co-Chair : E Avall-Lundqvist • Past Co-Chair : J McAlpine Agenda • Update publications brainstorming Leiden • General topic F Joly - Impact of lifestyle on gynecologic cancers M McCaroll • Working group session - Lesson from previous QOL substudies M Friedlander - Paola QoL Substudy I Ray Coquard – E Pujade Lauraine et al • Ongoing studies - SB Study - Elderly EWOC study GOG 273 - Patient satisfaction (expression III/IV) - Survivorship- Ovquest, Most Opal, Echo, Review - Vivrovaire, Others • Projects M Friedlander F Joly for G Freyer F Joly for G Fleming J McAlpine for J Sehouli M Friedlander F Joly, al J McAlpine , F Joly and al Survivorship in endometrial cancer: patients: discussion and action items FUTURE ideas –Translational research - discussion Update of the publications of the brainstorming session, PRO and endometrial cancer (Leiden) International Journal of Gynecological Cancer Paper 1 : Quality of Life and Patient-Reported-Outcomes in endometrial cancer clinical trials- a call for action F Joly, J.N. Mc Alpine, R.A. Nout, E Avall-Lundqvist, E Shash, M Friedlander and on behalf of the Gynaecologic Cancer Intergroup (GCIG) • Paper 2: Quality of life research in endometrial cancer: what is needed to advance progress in this disease site? Methodologic Considerations from the GCIG Symptom Benefit Working Group Brainstorming Session, Leiden 2012 JN McAlpine, E Greimel, LA Brotto, RA Nout , E Shash, E Avall-Lundqvist, ML Friedlander, F Joly on behalf of the Gynecologic Cancer Intergroup (GCIG) • In minor revisions! Impact of lifestyle on gynecologic cancers Michele L. McCarroll, PhD Women’s Health Research Director, Summa Health System Assistant Professor, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Northeast Ohio Medical University (NEOMED) That’s more than healthcare. That’s smartcare. INTERVENTIONS Published interventions like the SUCCEED trial to promote weight loss and a healthy lifestyle using traditional, “face-to-face” approaches have been successful in reducing weight and improving lifestyle von Gruenigen et al. Gynecol Oncol. 2012 Jun Basen-Engquist K, Health Psychol. 2013 Nov That’s more than healthcare. That’s smartcare. Working group – QoL Paola Substudy • Lessons from Icon 7 and GOG 218 previous QoL Substudies (M Friedlander) Questions QOL Paola Substudy • Is Pro assessment important? And why? • What do we want to capture? • Definition of our PRO a-priori hypothesis (ses) • Choice of the tools and methods • Patients self reported toxicities? • QOL questionnaires? • Qtwist? • Patients preferences? • Timing of measure GCIG QoL PAOLA substudy committee Urgence to have guidelines for PRO analysis in the area of maintenance therapy! Special working group on QOL Assessment in Ovarian cancer Tokyo Consensus conference, 2015 Ongoing studies • SB Study • Survivorship : Ovquest, Most Opal, Echo, Review, Vivrovaire • Elderly Ewoc study GOG 273 study • Expression IV 11 SYMPTOM BENEFIT Does palliative chemotherapy improve symptoms in women with recurrent ovarian cancer? Principal Investigator: Michael Friedlander GCIG Meeting, Chicago, May 2014 Hyatt Canberra | 26–29 March 2014 The aims of the study are to; Determine the validity, reliability and statistical efficiency of a new patientreported outcome measure, the MOST Develop criteria for defining subjective symptom benefit and defining minimally important difference Determine what proportion of women with platinum resistant recurrent ovarian cancer have subjective benefit with palliative chemotherapy and Develop a prognostic model to predict likelihood of benefit of chemotherapy, time to progression and survival in this heterogeneous group of patients. Trial Status 13 Study will close to recruitment end of 2014 Currently 748 patients Accrual rate ~50/month Country # pts ANZGOG 132 ICORG 62 AGO 79 MITO 74 PMHC 56 GINECO 141 NSGO 32 CRUK 98 JGOG/GOTIC 65 COGI 9 GCIG Meeting, Chicago, May 2014 Hyatt Canberra | 26–29 March 2014 www.anzgog.org.au or www.ovariancancer.net.au Collaboration with UK – Sarah Blagden / USA Coleman/Hertzog Ovarian Cancer National Alliance Canada Jessica McAlpine -Ovarian Cancer Canada 15 MOST -OPAL Objectives: Primary objectives: To (i) investigate the acceptability of the MOST questionnaire and its ability to detect symptoms of recurrence and (ii) document the frequency and impact of late-effects of treatment in women with advanced ovarian cancer during follow up after completion of first line chemotherapy. Hyatt Canberra | 26–29 March 2014 The ECHO trial: Exercise during CHemotherapy for Ovarian cancer. Study design: Randomised, controlled trial (RCT) evaluating the effect of an exercise intervention among women undergoing chemotherapy for ovarian cancer on physical wellbeing, chemotherapy-related adverse effects, chemotherapy adherence, physical function, quality of life, progression-free survival and health care costs. The aim of this study is to determine the enduring effects on survivorship of an exercise intervention during first-line adjuvant chemotherapy for epithelial ovarian cancer PI Sandi Hayes- Pilot funded – large grant submitted Vivrovaire Pr Florence JOLY 09/06/2014 17 09/06/2014 18 EWOC-1 Elderly Women Ovarian Cancer Multicenter, randomized trial of carboplatin +/- paclitaxel in vulnerable elderly patients with stage IIB-IV advanced ovarian cancer First ENGOT-GCIG international study of elderly patients in Ovarian Cancer Participating Groups GINECO, AGO, MITO, ANZGOG, Canada, JGOG, GOTIC, NSGO 19 Patient identification EWOC-1 Flow chart 70 years old Stage III-IV ovarian cancer Initial diagnosis GVS consent Not eligible NO YES GVS screening score ADL < 6 score IADL < 25 score HADS > 14 albuminemia < 35g/L lymphopenie < 1G/L Vulnerable patient? Registry NO Chemotherapy per investigator choice Registry should include 500 patients (Ewoc-1 and non vulnerable patients ) YES EWOC-1 consent NO NO YES Inclusion and exclusion criteria respect? YES Ewoc-1 randomization 240 patients Arm A carboplatin AUC 5 + paclitaxel 175mg/m² q21 X 6 cycles Arm B carboplatin AUC 5-6 q21 X 6 cycles Intervall debulking is allowed Arm C carboplatin AUC 2 + paclitaxel 60 mg/m² weekly q28 (d1, d8, d15) x 6 cycles PRIMARY ENDPOINT To compare the rate of success to deliver 6 courses of chemotherapy without progression at 6 months or unacceptable toxicity* of 3 different regimens in vulnerable elderly patients Screening Chemotherapy 6 cycles GVS>3 Imagery QOL (Fact-O) +/- Interval debulking (stratified) 6 month visit Follow-up every 3 mo. (up to 2 years) Imagery QOL (Fact-O) * Unacceptable Toxicity = is defined as a major adverse event related to chemotherapy or treatment procedures leading either to early treatment stopping, to an unplanned hospital admission or to death. 21 EWOC-1 Recruitment EWOC-1 300 250 39% No randomised 61% 200 150 Randomised Planned Randomized Actual randomizations 100 0 GINECO First Patient In 12/12/2013 7 Dec 2013 janv-14 Feb March Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec janv-15 Feb March Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec janv-16 Feb March Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 50 GOG 273 Update Chemotherapy Toxicity in Elderly Women with Ovarian , Primary Peritoneal or Fallopian Tube Cancer Gini Fleming Chair GOG Working Group on Elderly StudyChair Vivian E. von Gruenigen, MD GOG-0273 • Liberal eligibility criteria • Patient and physician therapy choices-not randomized • Prospective geriatric assessment • Allows neoadjuvant chemotherapy • Targeted initial accrual 185 GOG-0273 •Accrual for regimen I and II closed 8/12/2013 •A third regimen (every three week carboplatin with weekly paclitaxel) opened at that time (n=100); will close after accrual of nine more patients GOG-0273 The primary objectives •Determine if Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) at entry is associated with the ability to complete chemotherapy • Sequential Pros (patient-related outcomes) •Estimate by regimen the % pts who are able to complete chemotherapy w & w/o dose reductions or delays and •Compare actual and calculated Carboplatin AUC Future Directions • Analysis of PK results • Analysis of third arm • Launch of new DCP-approved trial testing an abbreviated Geriatric Assessment prior to initial cytoreductive surgery Discussion • Minimal geriatric assessment in new ovarian clinical trials (for the subgroup of patients > 70 years Expression IV What do primary and recurrent ovarian cancer (OC) patients expect from maintenance therapy? (ENGOT-ov22) Survey Timeline 2014 2013 May Sep Nov Dec Feb Autumn Ethic approval in 2013-05-16 Start Germany Start Romania Start Slovenia Start Belgium/Austria/Italy Other countries will follow as soon as possible (Serbia, France, Spain, Finland, Poland, Turkey) First evaluation autumn 2014 number of participants 400 350 participants 300 250 online 200 paper 150 100 50 0 Germany Austria Belgium Slovenia Italy Country status: 2014-05-15 Romania Total Projects • Endometrial cancer survey patients ( J McAlpine) QoL and Survivorship in Endometrial Cancer: Where are we now? J McAlpine on behalf of the SB Group Components EMQuest survey Series of initial questions re demographics, weight and height, stage, histology, prior treatment including how many lines, what drugs, participation in a clinical trial+/- targeted Rx?, etc New Questions teasing out: • Community size • Attending a major cancer center? • Comorbidities • Self perceived weight category • Diet and exercise regimen pre and post dx • Inherited syndromes • Radiation and hormonal therapy UPDATES since last meeting Papers (2) generated from Leiden meeting accepted EMQUEST poised to launch-disease site changes, host in Canada, Aus, France, French translation in process KEEN TO HAVE NEW COUNTRIES OR CA CENTERS JOIN! Other languages? Advocacy and hosting. Survey can start in 2 or 3 months Questions?