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New Drug Trials in Pediatric Oncology: Challenges and Opportunities Brenda J. Weigel, M.Sc., M.D. Associate Professor Pediatric Hematology/Oncology Department of Pediatrics and University of Minnesota Masonic Cancer Center Outline • Overview of pediatric oncology phase I trials: rationale for need • Overview of drug development • Examples of new drug integration in pediatric oncology • Pediatric phase I study design and overview of general outcomes Why do we need new agents in Pediatric Oncology? Overall Survival in Pediatric Oncology Has Been Steadily Improving Overall Survival in Pediatric Oncology Has Been Steadily Improving Event-Free Survival in Metastatic Rhadomyosarcoma Pediatric Patients Only 24% at 2 years J. Clin. Oncol. 19: 213-19, 2001 Rhabdomyosarcoma Treatment: Worst Degree of Toxicity for Intermediate Stage Disease 700 (n=1062) 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 Mild Moderate Severe Life Threatening Fatal Adapted from Crist et al. J. Clin Oncol. June 2001 Doxorubicin Cardiotoxicity Doxorubicin Cardiotoxicity Why do we need new agents in Pediatric Oncology? • Improve cure rates • Decrease acute toxicity • Minimize risks for late effects What Is Needed to Get a Drug Approved? Summary of Drug Development • Drug development is an orderly process designed to minimize risk and determine benefit • Clinical studies are required to produce the evidence to determine risk and benefit • Clinical drug development is most effective with understanding and communication between all involved: scientists and clinical doctors Select a Drug for Development • Available drug/product either from pharmaceutical company or custom made • Biological plausibility: basic biology and science • Pre-clinical information in relevant models of cancer • Pre-clinical and clinical information for dosing, safety and drug stability Drug Development in Oncology • Phase I Dose Finding and side effects • Phase II Defining activity by disease: does the drug work in some patients • Phase III Prospective randomized trial(s) defining role of therapy for a given disease: randomized studies comparing new approach to standard of care • Phase IV After market studies: looking for new diseases for a drug Example: Gleevac for GIST • 1985: Dr. Druker starts lab work at DFCI, Boston evaluating targets for cancer therapy • 1990: He and others linked the basic science work to changes in a form of leukemia • 1990-1993: development of pre-clinical cancer model systems evaluating the target • 1993: Dr. Druker relocated to the University of Oregan and connects with Ciba-Geigy (now Novartis) who had potential drugs to “hit” the target • 1998: first studies to find the same targets in GIST and in some forms of leukemia • 1999: first human trial of the drug Gleevac in patients with leukemia • 2000: pediatric phase I study in Ph+ leukemia • 2001: FDA gave accelerated approval for Gleevac in relapsed CML - 53% of patients responded • 2002: FDA granted full approval for newly diagnosed CML • 2002: First trial of Gleevac in GIST • 2003: FDA expanded approval for other forms of CML and leukemia • 2008: FDA grants full approval for GIST as 52% of patients responded to Gleevac GIST approval 23 yrs after initial basic studies on the pathway were started Overview of Therapeutic Development Screening, animal studies, chemistry, batching Initial dose finding and safety studies Pre-IND. IND Filing Pre1 clinical Initial activity and further safety studies 2 Comparative efficacy studies, chemistry scale up, prepare NDA 3 Post marketing safety review, other commitments NDA Filing 4 Pre-IND Meeting 30 day multidisciplinary safety review Consultation End of Phase 2 Meeting Comprehensive Premultidisciplinary NDA review often Meeting with Advisory Monitor safety, review new protocols, annual reports, approve exceptions Committee discussion Safety and Phase 4 monitoring Overview • Build the scientific basis and pre-clinical platform to take a drug to clinical trial – Approximately 5-10 yrs • Have sponsorship for trial, averages approximately 1 million dollars for a phase I trial • Only 1 in 10 drugs make it to phase III testing – Approximately 5-10 yrs from phase I to phase III approval • Multiple regulatory steps to drug approval Prioritization of Novel Targeted Agents in Pediatric Oncology Many Challenges • Many agents potentially available • Small patient numbers • Heterogenous diseases • What are the targets? • What is the optimal amount of pre-clinical data to justify a clinical trial? Strategies to Prioritize • Biology: Target identification • Tumor type • Drug availability and formulation • Pre-clinical data • Clinical data Biology • Identify the target • Neuroblastoma and anaplastic large cell lymphoma • Alk-1 • Is having the target enough? • Sarcomas • IGF pathway • Different tumors, different receptor/ligand dependence • Resistence mechanisms/accessory pathways? ALK-1 Genetic Alterations in Cancer ALK aberrations Mutations Amplification Translocations Neuroblastoma ALCL IMT NSCLC Somatic Somatic unique shared unique unique Germline No activity Ligand dependent No activity Constitutive Constitutive Clin Cancer Res 2009;15:5609-14 IGF Pathway Oncologist 2009 Different Tumors: Different Dependence IGF Pathway Tumor Cytogenetics Fusion Gene Ligan d Receptor Relevance Alveolar RMS t(2:13),t(1:13) PAX3-FKHR IGF-II PAX7-FKHR IGF-IR Autocrine growth factor Embryonal RMS complex - IGF-II IGF-IR Autocrine growth factor Synovial Sarcoma t(X:18) SS18-SSX1 SS18-SSX2 IGF-II IGF-IR SS18-SSX induced transformation Ewing’s Sarcoma t(11:22) EWS-FLI1 IGF-I IGF-IR Required for EWS-FLI transformation Osteosarcoma complex - IGF-I IGF-II IGF-IR IGF-IR activation stimulates growth J Pathol 2009;217:469-482 Tumor Type • Target agent development based on tumor type • Antibody therapy • Neuroblastoma, CH14.18 • CNS tumors • Issues of blood brain barrier Drug Availability and Formulation • Oral vs IV • Suspension • Deluent: DMSO etc • Industry or CTEP Pre-clinical Data • Cell lines • Readily available for most cancers • Can investigate and understand targets • No understanding of host factors • Animal Models • Issues of immunodeficient mice if using xenografts • Orthotopic vs alternative site • Dose/schedule/toxicity Pediatric Preclinical Testing Program (PPTP) (http://pptp.stjude.org/) Examples of In Vivo Growth Curves NB-SD Rh10 Combination Treatment with Rapamycin & Cyclophosphamide Rh18 KT-14 IMC-A12 in Vivo Growth Curves Rhabdomy o-sarcoma Therapy with Rapamycin + IGF-1R Antibody Osteosarcoma (OS9) Ewing Sarcoma (EW5) Kurmasheva et al. AACR 2008 Clinical Data • Do studies in adults predict success in pediatrics? • Generally very different tumor types except maybe sarcomas • Do phase I responses predict phase II success then phase III improvement in outcome??? • Not so far for rhabdomyosarcoma What is the Main Aim of Every Pediatric Oncology Phase I Study? • Evaluation of toxicity in a pediatric population – What are the dose limiting toxicities (DLTs)? – Define the maximally tolerated dose (MTD) Secondary Aims in Pediatric Oncology Phase I Studies • Define the pharmacokinetics of a drug in a pediatric population • Evaluate relevant biological end-points in a pediatric population Example Camptothecin’s in Rhabdomyosarcoma New Drug Development in RMS Xenograft to Phase III Clinical Trials Xenograft model Phase II Window Definitive Phase III Study Melphalan + vincristine Active Too toxic Ifosfamide + etoposide Active IRS IV + doxorubicin Active Single agent (IRS V) Active No activity in relapse + cyclophos (D9501) Active Intermediate-Risk (D9803) Topotecan Irinotecan RMS Studies • Xenograft model predicted substantial clinical activity • Responses noted in SJCRH phase I trial • High response rate in MSKCC patients Camptothecin Derivatives in resistant xenografts Tumor Rh 12/VCR Rh 18/VCR Rh 18/TOPO Rh 28/LPAM VRC5/TOPO Camptothecin Irinotecan Topotecan ++++ +++ ++++++ +++++ ++++++ + +++++ + +++ + Window timeline and accrual* 1988 1991 1995 ID IE v VM 96 93 Topo 39 353 *Contemporary high risk patients 1996 1999 2001 TC CPT CPT/V 57 20 48 Irinotecan Window Study • CPT-11 is active against high-risk metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma but as single agent has high PD rate Irinotecan + Vincristine are Synergistic Control CPT + Vcr Weeks Weeks Tumor Volume Weeks Tumor Volume CPT 0.4 mg/kg (dx5)2 x 3 Tumor Volume Tumor Volume Vcr 1 mg/kg q7d x 9 Weeks The challenge of high-risk RMS – IE – ID – VAC (IRS III) 1.0 IRS/COG RMS Window Trials Failure Free Survival 0.9 Failure-Free Survival • Window trials identify new agents and combinations • But – without improvement in outcome • Combinations with most activity 0.8 p=0.016 0.7 0.6 IRS-III 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 Topo TC CPT-11 IE, ID, VM 0.0 0 1 2 3 4 5 Time trialgp IRS3 alkylator topo/cpt11 CNSR 29 39 16 FAIL 86 150 100 TOTAL 115 189 116 MEDIAN 1.48 1.19 1 Window Responses in Rhabdomyosarcoma Window Ifosphamide/doxorubicin CR PR Response 11% 41% 52% Vincristine/melphalan 4% 51% 55% Ifosphamide/etoposide 5% 36% 41% Topotecan 3% 46% 49% Topotecan/cyclophosphamide 4% 46% 50% Irinotecan 0% 45% 45% Irinotecan/vincristine 2% 73% 75% ARST0431 schema Study Conduct • Opened for patient enrollment: July 17, 2006 • Closed to patient enrollment: June 13, 2008 • Study amended 03/07 based on data from ARST0121 showing similar toxicity and efficacy of irinotecan given daily x 5 x 2 or daily x 5 x 1 • 109 patients enrolled – 20 received irinotecan on daily x 5 x 2 schedule – 89 received irinotecan on daily x 5 x 1 schedule Response, Early Event-Free Survival • 6-week response data • CR: 7%; PR : 57% (CR+PR=64%); PD: 5% • Early response data similar to that seen in previous studies of patients with metastatic disease • The early response rate was also similar by histology (RR for embyronal RMS: 58%; alveolar RMS: 66%) • 18 month event-free survival estimated to be 66% (95% confidence interval: 55%, 75%) • 18 month overall survival estimated to be 80% IGF Targeting, Rhabdomyosarcoma and Developmental Therapeutics COG ADVL0712 – Study Design • Standard Pediatric Phase I Eligibility Criteria • Part A: Dose-finding Phase in refractory solid tumors • excluding CNS tumors and lymphomas • Part B: Expanded Cohort for Ewing sarcoma/PNET • Treatment: • IMC-A12 IV over 1 hour once weekly in 28 day cycles • 2 dose levels (6 mg/kg and 9 mg/kg) Patient Characteristics Total Number Patients 24 Evaluable toxicity/response 22 / 22 Median age, years (range) 15 (7 – 21) Male/female 11 / 13 Diagnoses Part A - Dose Finding Cohort Osteosarcoma 3 Rhabdomyosarcoma 2 Non-rhabdo STS 5 Wilms tumor 2 Diagnoses Part B – Expansion Cohort Ewing sarcoma (6 mg/kg) 12 Dose-limiting Toxicities Part A: Dose Finding Dose # Entered # Eval # DLT DLT Detail 6 6 6 1 Grade 4 Thrombocytopenia 9 6 6 0 - (mg/kg) Part B: Ewing Sarcoma/PNET Dose (mg/kg) 6 # Entered # Eval # DLT DLT Detail 12 10 0 - Response Summary (RECIST) Part A: Dose Finding Dose # Eval Objectives Responses CR PR SD* Diagnoses 6 mg/kg 6 1 Alveolar Soft-Part Sarcoma 9 mg/kg 6 1 Fibrosarcoma Part B: Ewing Sarcoma/PNET Cohort Dose 6 mg/kg # Eval 10 Objectives Responses CR PR SD* 1 4 Diagnoses Ewing Sarcoma * Stable disease ≥ 3 cycles (Median 7, Range 3-11) 06/13/08 07/01/08 Response by FDG PET 06/13/08 07/01/08 Current Status of IMC-A12 Studies in COG • ADVL0712, single agent phase I completed • ADVL0821, single agent phase 2 ongoing • ADVL0813, phase I in combination with temsirolimus ongoing • ADVL0822, phase 2 combination with temsirolimus, pending • ARST08P1, pilot with ARST0431 chemotherapy in HR RMS Review of Pediatric Oncology Phase I Experience Lee et al. J Clin Oncol Nov. 2005 Review of 15 Year Experience • 69 studies published 1990-2004 – 55 single-agent – 14 multi-agent • 46 different anti-cancer agents • Populations – 9 studies in leukemia only – 14 studies in either solid tumors or leukemia • 1973 patients enrolled – 1779 patients (90.2%) fully evaluable for toxicity – 1809 patients (91.7%) evaluable for response – Median age 10.9 yrs Diagnoses Enrolled on Phase I Studies Traditional Pediatric Oncology Phase I Study Design • Starting dose: approx 80% of adult MTD • Escalation Schema – 0/3 pts with DLT – escalate to next level – 1/3 pts with DLT – expand to 6 pts – 2 of 3-6 pts with DLT: MTD exceeded • MTD: the dose level at which 0 or 1/6 pts experience DLT with at least 2 of 3-6 pts encountering DLT at the next higher dose Safety of Pediatric Oncology Phase I Studies • Likelihood of developing a DLT once enrolled onto a study: 24% • Toxic death rate: 0.5% Tumor Response Rates on Pediatric Phase I Studies • 40/67 studies has at least one objective response • 1809 patients evaluable for response – 50 CRs – 123 PRs • Response rate – Overall 9.6% – Single-agent 6.8% – Multi-agent 20.1% Do Pediatric Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics Differ from Adults? • Phramacokinetics – Is drug clearance observed in adults predictive of that observed in children? • Pharmacodynamics – Is the adult MTD predictive of the pediatric MTD? Plasma Drug Clearance is Correlated Between Adults and Children (r=0.98) and Adult Drug Clearance is Predictive of Pediatric Clearance 1000.00 100.00 10.00 1.00 0.10 0.01 0.00 1000 100 10 1 0.1 0.01 0.001 Drug Clearance in Adults (L/h/m2) Drug Clearance in Children (L/h/m2) Plasma Drug Clearance Pediatric MTD 0.7-1.6 of Adult MTD for Cytotoxic Agents Less Data for Correlation of MTD in Biologic Agents Current Challenges • Many new drugs are biological agents with minimal toxicity: need to redefine concept of MTD • Currently pharmacological and biological studies are considered optional for enrollment on pediatric oncology phase I studies – How do we ultimately determine what drugs to move forward if minimal biological data relevant to childhood cancer? Summary: Potential Risks of Pediatric Oncology Phase I Studies • Approximately 25% of patients have DLT – DLTs are almost always reversible – Lower risk of severe toxicity compared to upfront studies • 0.5% toxic death rate – Includes possibly, probably or definitely related to drug – Potentially could be further decreased by capping escalation at 1.6x adult MTD • Risk of significant morbidity and mortality on phase I trials is lower then most front-line and salvage regimens Potential Benefits of Pediatric Oncology Phase I Studies • 9.6% overall response rate • Time to progression (SD) likely higher but no good data • Most current phase I trials are predominantly outpatient regimens • Contribute to improving care for future patients • Hope Balancing Risks and Benefits • Cure is not a realistic goal of phase I therapy • Set realistic expectations – Tolerability – Impact on QOL – Likelihood of tumor regression/response • Symptom control and other palliative care issues are of paramount importance Principles of Informed Consent • Present information about the diagnosis • Discuss standard of care treatment • Discuss trial design/experimental agent or question • NO obligation to enroll • Give time for all questions to be discussed Role of Pediatric Oncology Nurse in Phase Early Phase Trials • Direct patient care provider • Patient advocate – Provide support while families look for miracle cures balancing palliative care needs/issues • Educator – Serve as a resource for new drug therapies, toxicities and protocols, provide information to families/patients and other providers/team members • Researcher – Follow the protocol, vigilant attention to detail and data management – Study requirements much more rigid and detailed than later phase trials – Opportunity to participate in national clinical trials J. Dahl www.aphon.org 24:3: 6-7, 2010 Pediatric Oncology Phase I Studies • Challenges – How do we pick the right agents to study in pediatrics? – How do we assess new drugs that will never reach a classic MTD but may have great biological activity? – How do we evaluate drugs in combination? Pediatric Oncology Phase I Studies • Opportunities – – – – Improve therapy for children with cancer Minimize toxicities of therapy Minimize late effects Gain greater understanding of biology of tumors Thank You Any Questions or Comments?