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Whats on the Horizon? David Thomson, Lead Pharmacist, Yorkshire Cancer Network. Overview 1. 2. YCN Approach Breast Cancer • • 3. Lung Cancer • 4. VEGF/R Pathway Colorectal Cancer • 5. Biological Combinations Renal Cell Carcinoma • • 6. Novel Cytotoxics ErbB Receptor Pathway Sequence and combinations New agents targeting alternative pathways “Best of the rest” in other clinical areas YCN Horizon Scanning • To provide advanced notice to organisations within the YCN of key new and emerging drugs around 1-3 years prior to launch in the UK. • Designed to be informative rather than detailed and definitive. • The reports outline: – – – – What the drug is? Likely patient population? Available research evidence? Prediction of likely use and its potential financial impact in the YCN. YCN Chemotherapy Management Database Assumptions • Evidence – this is a summary only. Refer to the clinical data referenced. • Dosing details – indicates how the drug may be used i.e dosing regimen. Predicted length of course is presented as follows: median values are taken from trial data; assumptions are based on trial end-points such as PFS, TTP; if no trial data available an estimate is used. • Cost per patient – assumes full courses and doses are given. Drug prices quoted are the acquisition costs (most recent BNF) of the drug in column 1 only and make the following assumptions: include VAT; wastage where appropriate; av. S.A. 1.75m2; av. wt 75kg. • Incidence – these are estimated figures and are presented as either expected number of patients per 100,000 population or as the total estimated number of patients. 100% uptake assumed unless stated otherwise. • Budget – this assumes a full year effect i.e. that all eligible patients receive their full course of therapy within that financial year. The following assumptions apply: YCN population 2,600,000; HYCCN population 1,100,000. Horizon Scanning Report Disclaimer! • The information used in producing these reports changes rapidly and the level of evidence presented and conclusions made about a drug’s potential impact must be treated with caution. • Reports are not intended to be a definitive statement on the safety, efficacy or effectiveness of the drug. • It should also be noted that just as drugs that are included in reports may not be required in the YCN or eventually launched in the UK there may also be drugs not included in reports that are eventually launched in the UK and required within the YCN. The Challenge Predicted New Drug Approval Dates Overview 1. 2. YCN Approach Breast Cancer • • 3. Lung Cancer • 4. VEGF/R Pathway Colorectal Cancer • 5. Biological Combinations Renal Cell Carcinoma • • 6. Novel Cytotoxics ErbB Receptor Pathway Sequence and combinations New agents targeting alternative pathways “Best of the rest” in other clinical areas Overview 1. 2. YCN Approach Breast Cancer • • 3. Lung Cancer • 4. VEGF/R Pathway Colorectal Cancer • 5. Biological Combinations Renal Cell Carcinoma • • 6. Novel Cytotoxics ErbB Receptor Pathway Sequence and combinations New agents targeting alternative pathways “Best of the rest” in other clinical areas Novel Paclitaxel Formulations First Generation Second Generation Albumin-Bound Paclitaxel Paclitaxel Poliglumex Paclitaxel Injectable Emulsion Paclitaxel Conjugated Paclitaxel Paclitaxel Carrier Human Serum Albumin Polyglutamate Vitamin E Phase III II II Albumin-bound Paclitaxel (%) (n=229) Paclitaxel (%) (n=225) P Value 33% 19% 0.001 23.0 wks 16.9 wks 0.005 Grade IV Neutropenia 9% 22% <0.001 Grade III Neuropathy 10% 2% <0.001 Active Drug ORR Median TTP Gradisher WJ, Tjulandin S, Davidson N, et al. Phase III trial of nanoparticle albumin-bound paclitaxel compared with polyethylated castor-oil based paclitaxel in women with breast cancer. J Clin Oncol 2005; 23: 7794 - 803 Epothilone Analogues Agent Epothilone Analogue Phase Ixabepilone Aza-epothilone B III Patupilone Epothilone B II Epothilone B (fully synthetic) II ZK-EPO Study No of pts Prior Chemotherapy Response rate Low 37 Taxane 22% Denduluri 23 No taxane 43% Conte 49 Taxane 12% Bunnell 50 Anthracycline and taxane 30% Perez 62 Anthracycline, taxane, capecitabine 18% J Clin Oncol 2007; 25: 3389 Vinflunine Number of Patients (%) (n=60) Overall Response Rate 18 (30%) Median PFS 3.7 mths (95% CI, 2.8-4.2 mths) Median OS 14.3 mths (95% CI, 9.2-19.6 mths) Campone M, Cortes-Funes H, Vorobiof D et al. Vinflunine: a new active drug for second-line treatment of advanced breast cancer. Results of a phase II and pharmacokinetic study in patients progressing after first-line anthracycline/taxane-based chemotherapy. Br J Cancer 2006; 95:1161-65 Novel cytotoxic agents – Summary Good data in breast cancer resistant to taxane therapy. Combination with targeted therapies as first-line therapy. Adjuvant therapy. Overview 1. 2. YCN Approach Breast Cancer • • Novel Cytotoxics ErbB Receptor Pathway • • 3. Lung Cancer • VEGF/R Pathway • • 4. VEGF Monoclonal Antibodies VEGFR Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors Colorectal Cancer • 5. Combinations Renal Cell Carcinoma • • 6. ErbB Monoclonal Antibodies ErbB Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors Sequence and combinations New agents targeting alternative pathways “Best of the rest” in other clinical areas ErbB Receptor Family Zhang H, Berezov A, Wang Q. ErbB receptors: from oncogenes to targeted cancer therapies. J. Clin. Invest. 2007; 117: 2051-2058. HER2 MoAbs – Pertuzumab Number of Patients (%) (n=33) Overall Response Rate 6 (18%) Partial response 5 (15%) Complete response 1 (3%) Stable Disease (≥ 6 mths) 7 (21%) Clinical Benefit Rate 13 (39%) Baselga J, Cameron D, Miles D, et al. Objective response rate in a phase II multicenter trial of pertuzumab (P) a HER2 dimerization inhibiting monoclonal antibody, in combination with trastuzumab (T) in patients with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer (MBC) which has progressed during treatment with T. J Clin Oncol 2007; 25(suppl): 33s (abstract 1004) ErbB TKI’s - Lapatinib Lapatinib/ Capecitabine (n=198) Capecitabine 24% 14% 0.017 Median OS 15.6 mths 15.3 mths 0.177 Median TTP 6.2 mths 4.3mths 0.00013 4 (2%) 13 (6%) 0. 045 ORR CNS as Site of Progression P Value (n=201) Geyer CE, Martin A, Newstat B, et al. Lapatinib (L) plus capecitabine (C) in HER2 + advanced breast cancer (ABC): genomic data. J Clin Oncol 2007; 25 (Suppl): 40s (abstract 1035) • Targets HER2 (ErbB2) and EGFR (ErbB1) • Crosses blood brain barrier? Current Lapatinib Trials Study Treatment Phase Primary Endpoints Refractory metastatic breast cancer patients NCT00320385 Trastuzumab + Lapatinib vs Lapatinib III PFS, RR NCT00098605 Lapatinib in brain metastases II RR in CNS First-line advanced breast cancer patients NCT00075270 Paclitaxel + Lapatinib vs Paclitaxel + Placebo III TTP, OS, RR NCT00073528 Letrozole + Lapatinib vs Letrozole + Placebo III TTP, OS, RR NCT00272987 Paclitaxel + Trastuzumab + Lapatinib vs Paclitaxel + Trastuzuab + Placebo III TTP, OS, RR II NR Inflammatory Breast Cancer NCT00111787 Lapatinib + paclitaxel in neoadjuvant IBC Adjuvant Breast Cancer NCT00490139 (ALTTO) Trastuzumab vs Lapatinib vs Trastuzumab + Lapatinib vs Trastuzumab - Lapatinib III OS, TTP, RR NCT00374322 Lapatinib vs placebo III DFS,OS, CNS recurr. Available at: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct. Accessed September 20, 2007. Second Generation ErbB TKI’s Target Type of binding Phase HKI-272 EGFR (ErbB1) HER2 (ErbB2) Irreversible II CI-1033 EGFR (ErbB1) HER2 (ErbB2) ErbB4 Irreversible II EKB-569 EGFR (ErbB1) Irreversible I • New strategies – Covalent irreversible binding to target – Broadening the affected targets ErbB Target - Summary Combinations with/without chemotherapy: EGFR MoAbs + VEGF MoAbs EGFR + VEGFR TKI’s EGFR MoAb + EGFR TKI Irreversible TKI’s Adjuvant therapy Overview 1. 2. YCN Approach Breast Cancer • • 3. Lung Cancer • 4. VEGF/R Pathway Colorectal Cancer • 5. Biological Combinations Renal Cell Carcinoma • • 6. Novel Cytotoxics ErbB Receptor Pathway Sequence and combinations New agents targeting alternative pathways “Best of the rest” in other clinical areas Lung Cancer Has chemotherapy in advanced NSCLC done all it can? Overview 1. 2. YCN Approach Breast Cancer • • 3. Novel Cytotoxics ErbB Receptor Pathway Lung Cancer • VEGF/R Pathway • • 4. Colorectal Cancer • 5. Biological Combinations Renal Cell Carcinoma • • 6. VEGF Monoclonal Antibodies VEGFR Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors Sequence and combinations New agents targeting alternative pathways “Best of the rest” in other clinical areas VEGF/R Pathway Ongoing Bevacizumab Trials Study Treatment Phase Primary Endpoints Second-line advanced NSCLC NCT00130728 Bevacizumab + erlotinib vs placebo + erlotinib III 0S First-line advanced NSCLC NCT00257608 Chemotherapy followed by bevacizumab + erlotinib vs bevacizumab + placebo IIIb PFS NCT00531960 Chemotherapy + bevacizumab vs erlotinib + bevacizumab II PFS Locally advanced NSCLC with previously treated CNS metastases NCT00312728 Bevacizumab in combination with 1st or 2nd line chemotherapy II Assess rate of grade ≥2 CNS hemorrhage III OS Stage IB, II, IIIA NSCLC NCT00324805 Adjuvant chemotherapy +/- bevacizumab Available at: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct. Accessed September 20, 2007. Small-molecule TKI’s VS MoAb’s TKI MoAb Selective Specific po IV Short Long Cross blood brain barrier + - Interactions + +/- ADCC - + Receptor downregulation + - Ability to target ligands - + Conjugation - + Tailoring effector functions - + Target Specificity Pharmokinetics Bioavailability Half-life Mechanisms of Action Potential for Engineering VEGFR TKI’s for NSCLC – ASCO 2007 Abstract No. Sunitinib 7542 Sorafenib 7547 Vandetinib (ZD6474) 7544 7654 AZD2171 (RecentinTM) 7649 Vatalinib 7541 Author Phase Study Brahmer II Continuous suntinib in previously treated Adjei II First line Heymach II First line – randomised study of Van vs Carbo/Pac vs Van/Carbo/Pac De Boer I Van + Pemetrexed in previously treated Goss I AZD2171/Gem/Cis in advanced NSCLC Gauler II Second line monotherapy Is potency important? Drug t1/2 (hrs) IC50 (Nm) Other VEGFR-1 VEGFR-2 VEGFR-3 PDGFR KIt 2 9 17 2 22 RET 90 20 68 B-Raf, RET EGFR,RET Sunitinib 44 Sorafenib ~27 Vandetinib (ZD6474) ~120 1600 40 110 1100 >20000 Recentin (AZD2171) 13-35 5 <1 <3 5 2 AMG706 5-7 2 3 6 8 84 Axitinib (AGO13736) 2-5 1.2 0.25 0.29 0.25 0.2 Vatalinib 3-6 77 37 660 580 730 RET Adapted from: Morabito A, De Maio E, Di Maio M, et al. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors of vascular endothelial growth factor receptors in clinical trials: Current status and future directions. Oncologist 2006; 11: 753-764 Or are other factors? Drug t1/2 (hrs) IC50 (Nm) Other VEGFR-1 VEGFR-2 VEGFR3 PDGFR KIt 2 9 17 2 22 RET 90 20 68 B-Raf, RET EGFR,RE T Sunitinib 44 Sorafenib ~27 Vandetinib (ZD6474) ~120 1600 40 110 1100 >20000 Recentin (AZD2171) 13-35 5 <1 <3 5 2 AMG706 5-7 2 3 6 8 84 Axitinib (AGO13736) 2-5 1.2 0.25 0.29 0.25 0.2 Vatalinib 3-6 77 37 660 580 730 RET Adapted from: Morabito A, De Maio E, Di Maio M, et al. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors of vascular endothelial growth factor receptors in clinical trials: Current status and future directions. Oncologist 2006; 11: 753-764 Dual Kinase Inhibition Vandetinib Docetaxel (n=41) Vandetinib 100mg + Docetaxel (n=42) Vandetinib 300mg + Docetaxel (n=44) Median PFS 12 wks 18.7 wks p=0.037 17.0 wks p= 0.231 Median OS NS NS NS Heymach JV, Johnson BE, Prager D. Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Phase II Study of Vandetanib Plus Docetaxel in Previously Treated Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer. J Clin Oncol 2007; 25: 4270-4277 VEGF/R Target - Summary Bevacizumab High risk patients Combination therapy (with chemo+/-biologics) Earlier stage disease Novel TKI’s TKI’s versus MoAbs? Is potency important? Dual kinase vs single kinase inhibitors? Overview 1. 2. YCN Approach Breast Cancer • • 3. Lung Cancer • 4. VEGF/R Pathway Colorectal Cancer • 5. Combinations Renal Cell Carcinoma • • 6. Novel Cytotoxics ErbB Receptor Pathway Sequence and combinations New agents targeting alternative pathways “Best of the rest” in other clinical areas Current Treatments • Irinotecan, oxaliplatin, capecitabine, bevacizumab, cetuximab. – Optimal combinations – Optimal sequences : maintenance vs holidays – Duration of therapy FOLFIRI + Cetuximab (n=599) FOLFIRI (n=599) P Value Median PFS 8.9 mths 8.0 mths 0.0479 Median PFS (liver mets only) 11.4 mths 9.2 mths 0.023 Van Cutsem E, Nowacki M, Lang I et al. Randomized phase III study of irinotecan and 5-FU/FA with or without cetuximab in the first-line treatment of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC): The CRYSTAL trial. J Clin Oncol 2007; 25(suppl): 18s (abstract 4000) Bevacizumab vs Cetuximab Combinations Combination n RR PFS Duration of therapy CRYSTAL FOLFIRI +/- Cetuximab 1198 +8.2% 8.9 vs 8.0 mths 5.6 vs 5.9 mths NO16966 FOLFOX/XELOX +/Bevacizumab 1400 NR 9.4 vs 8.0 mths 6.0 vs 6.0 mths AVF2107 IFL +/- Bevacizumab 813 +10% 10.6 vs 6.2 mths 8.0 vs 5.2 mths PFS Improvements limited. CRYSTAL/NO16966 stopped all therapy upon progression. Is there higher level of benefit from continuing treatment beyond progression? Why target both VEGF and ErbB? • EGFR inhibitors known to exert angiogenic effects by reducing expression of VEGF and other proangiogenic factors by tumour cells • EGFR may be induced on tumour epithelium and contribute to tumour angiogenesis • Acquired resistance to EGFR blockade is associated with increased VEGF expression Combinations - Summary Combined VEGF/EGFR inhibition may therefore provide a more potent antiangiogenic effect in addition to direct effects on EGFR+ tumour cells Is maintenance therapy of benefit? Ongoing Studies Study Treatment Phase Primary Endpoints Bevacizumab adjuvant CRC NCT00217737 5FU/Leucovorin/Oxaliplatin +/- bevacizumab III DFS at 3yrs Cetuximab/ Bevacizumab combinations in mCRC NCT00265850 Combination chemotherapy + cetuximab +/bevacizumab III OS NCT00499369 Chemotherapy + cetuximab +/- bevacizumab III OS Novel VEGFR TKI’s NCT00457691 FOLFIRI +/- sunitinib III PFS NCT00460603 Axitinib/FOLFOX/Bevacizumab vs Axitinib/ FOLFOX vs FOLFOX/Bevacizumab II ORR NCT00387389 FOLFOX6 or CapeOx +/- pazopanib I Safety Available at: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct. Accessed September 20, 2007. Overview 1. 2. YCN Approach Breast Cancer • • 3. Lung Cancer • 4. VEGF/R Pathway Colorectal Cancer • 5. Biological Combinations Renal Cell Carcinoma • • 6. Novel Cytotoxics ErbB Receptor Pathway Sequence and combinations New agents targeting alternative pathways “Best of the rest” in other clinical areas mTOR Pathway - Temsirolimus Rini B, Kar S, Kirkpatrick P. Temsirolimus. Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 2007; 6: 599-600 Temsorilumus Interferon (n=207) Temsirolimus (n=209) Interferon + Temsirolimus (n=210) Median OS 7.3 mths 10.9 mths p=0.008 8.4 mths p= 0.7 Median PFS 1.9 mths 3.8 mths 3.7 mths Hudes G, Carducci M, Tomczak P, et al. Temsirolimus, Interferon Alfa, or Both for Advanced Renal-Cell Carcinoma. N Engl J Med 2007; 356: pg. 2271 Sequence and Combination in mRCC – ASCO 2007 Abstract No. Sequence Sequence Sequence 5038 5106 5032 Sorafenib Combinations 5100 Sunitinib Combinations Combination 5099 5101 ECOG (2804): BEST Trial Author Phase Study Sequential sorafenib – sunitinib vs sunitinib - sorafenib Sablin Dham II Sequential sorafenib – sunitinib vs sunitinib - sorafenib Rini II Sequential sorefenib - axitinib I/II II II Sorafenib + Bevacizumab Sorafenib + Evorilimus (RAD-001) Sorafenib + IFN-α Sorafenib + HD – IL2 Feldman Kondagun ta I I I Sunitinib + Everolimus (RAD-001) Suntinib + Bevacizumab Sunitinib + IFN - II Bevacizumab vs Bevacizumab + Sorafenib vs Bevacizumab + Temsorilimus vs Sorafenib + Temsorilimus in the front line setting Bracarda - New agents in mRCC – ASCO 2007? Abstract No. Axitinib Author Phase Rini II Sequential in patients refractory to sorafenib – estimated PFS > 7.1mths Jac II No more than 1 prior therapy – prolonged TTP = 3mths Hutson II In patients who had failed one bevacizumab or cytokine containing regimen – PR rate at wk 12 of 40% Yazji II Anti-integrin antibody – Median TTP 4mths. Median OS not reached after 22mths. OS at 12mths 68%. 5032 Everolimus (RAD 001) 5107 Pazopanib 5031 Voliciximab 5094 Study Novel Agents and Strategies Summary New agents with targets other than ErbB or VEGF/R Which combination(s) is best? Which sequence of agents is best? Sequence of TKI’s Sequence of different therapies Adjuvant therapy Overview 1. 2. YCN Approach Breast Cancer • • 3. Lung Cancer • 4. VEGF/R Pathway Colorectal Cancer • 5. Biological Combinations Renal Cell Carcinoma • • 6. Novel Cytotoxics ErbB Receptor Pathway Sequence and combinations New agents targeting alternative pathways “Best of the rest” in other clinical areas Haematology –MDS Haematology – AML Haematology – Chronic Leukaemias Haematology – Multiple Myeloma Haematology - General Prostate Cancer Head and Neck Cancer Pancreatic Cancer Skin Cancer Upper GI Cancer