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Rome, 28/3/2008 Clinical trials challenges with targeted agents Paolo Bruzzi Clinical Epidemiology, Dept. of Epidemiology and Prevention, Istituto Nazionale per la Ricerca sul Cancro Genoa - Italy Trials: Rationale of Phases 1. Any new drug, when first used in man, involves unknown risks, and has unknown pharmacological and toxic properties: PHASE I Aims of of clinical trials Phase I Question: (How much, often, etc.) can (should) I use the drug? Aims of of clinical trials Phase I Question: How (much, often, etc.) can (should) I use the drug? Endpoints: Toxicity, Pharmacology MTD (Dose-response?) Rationale of Phases 1. Any new drug, when first used in man, involves unknown risks, and has unknown pharmacological and toxic properties: PHASE I 2. Before starting a long and expensive efficacy trial, it is convenient to know if the drug has the effects (ACTIVITY) that make its efficacy plausible: PHASE II Activity vs Efficacy • Efficacy: The benefit desired by the patient Usually, quantity and/or quality of life Activity vs Efficacy • Efficacy: The benefit desired by the patient • Activity: The direct effects (mechanisms) by which the treatment is supposed to produce the benefit Activity vs Efficacy • Efficacy: The benefit desired by the patient • Activity: – – – – – Antihypertensive Diuretic Lipid Lowering Antibacterial Antiarythmic Aims of of clinical trials Phase I Phase II Question: Does the drug what it is supposed to do to the disease (the organism)? Aims of of clinical trials Phase I Phase II Question: Does the drug what it is supposed to do to the disease (the organism)? Endpoints: Activity Endpoints (Changes in the disease or in physiopathological parameters) Rationale of Phases 1. Any new drug, when first used in man, involves unknown risks, and has unknown pharmacological and toxic properties: PHASE I 2. Before starting a long and expensive efficacy trial, it is necessary to know if the drug has the effects (ACTIVITY) that make its efficacy plausible: PHASE II 3. The EFFICACY of a treatment is not warranted by its Activity: PHASE III Activity = Mechanisms of action Intervention ACTIVITY Antidiabetic Reduction in blood sugar Antihypertens. Reduction in B.P. Screening Earlier Diagnosis Activity = Mechanisms of action Intervention ACTIVITY EFFICACY Antidiabetic Reduction in blood sugar Red.mortality Red.morbility Antihypertens. Reduction in B.P. Prev. CVD Screening Earlier Diagnosis Red. Mortality Red. Incidence Aims of of clinical trials Phase I Phase II Phase III Question: Does the drug do what the patient expects from it? Aims of of clinical trials Phase I Phase II Phase III Question: Does the drug do what the patient expects from it? Endpoints: Efficacy Endpoint(s) Overall Survival - QoL Surrogate endpoints Note • The rationale of trial phases has no implications for their methodology • The methodology of phases is related to: – – – – Therapeutic paradigm Characteristics of experimental therapy Endpoints Ethical Problems Trials of Cytotoxic Drugs Underlying Paradigm 1. Monotonic dose-effect relationship (the more the better) Trials of Cytotoxic Drugs Underlying Paradigm 1. Monotonic dose-effect relationship 2. Direct cell killing Trials of Cytotoxic Drugs Underlying Paradigm 1. Monotonic dose-effect relationship 2. Direct cell killing 3. Constant proportion of tumor cells killed (independent of the number of cells) Consequences PHASE I trials: Aim: (The more the better ->) Finding the Maximum Tolerated Dose (MTD) of the drug (combination) Note: MTD? (single dose, total dose, doseintensity, dose-density, mode of injection, etc.) Consequences PHASE I trials: Toxicity: Specific Uncontrolled phase I trials Consequences PHASE II trials: Aim: (Direct cell killing ->) Assessing the antitumor activity (ability to differentially kill tumor cells) Antitumor activity: Reduction of volume of tumor mass Primary= Objective Response (%) Phase II: Implications • Spontaneous tumor reduction (>50%) is rare (<1%)No need for control groups Phase II: Implications • Uncontrolled Phase II trials Phase II: Implications • Uncontrolled Phase II trials • Need to assess tumor reduction – Patients with measurable lesions – Unresectable cancers – (Preoperative (primary) chemotherapy) Phase II: Implications • Uncontrolled Phase II trials • Phase II trials in metastatic pts Phase II: Implications • Uncontrolled Phase II trials • Phase II trials in metastatic pts • Proportional reduction: Effects in metastatic cancer Micrometastatic disease Phase II: Implications • Uncontrolled Phase II trials • Phase II trials in metastatic pts • Phase III trials in disease-free (and metastatic) patients Development of cytotoxic drugs Phase I: Uncontrolled, dose-escalation in heavily pretreated pts Phase II: Uncontrolled, response rate with MTD in pts with measurable disease Phase III: Large RCT‘s, OS (RFS/PFS) in unselected, resected/metastatic pts Development of cytotoxic drugs Other peculiarities of phase III trials • Unselected patients – Site- and stage-specific Development of cytotoxic drugs Other peculiarities of phase III trials • Unselected patients – Site- and stage-specific – Histology-specific? (e.g. NSCLC) Development of cytotoxic drugs Other peculiarities of phase III trials • Unselected patients • Pragmatic (EFFECTIVENESS) Development of cytotoxic drugs Other peculiarities of phase III trials • Unselected patients • Pragmatic (EFFECTIVENESS) • Classical ‘Frequentist’ Statistics – Test of significance, power – Adjustment of p values for multiple looks – Frequentist 95% CI Development of a new cytotoxic drug Phase I Pre-treated pts MTD Phase II Tumour A Metastatic Pts High response rate Phase III Metastatic Pts Survival (PFS) Tumour B Metastatic pts Low response rate Phase III Radically Resected Pts Survival (RFS) ‘New’ Anticancer Therapies • • • • • • • • Targeted Therapies Biological Response Modifiers (e.g.IL-2) Cancer Vaccines Cell Therapy Gene Therapy Anti-angiogenetic drugs Others Associations? Targeted therapies Definition (NCI Dictionary) targeted therapy (...THAYR-uh-pee) A type of treatment that uses drugs or other substances, such as monoclonal antibodies, to identify and attack specific cancer cells without harming normal cells. Targeted therapies • G. Sledge (JCO, 2005): ‘‘A targeted therapy should attack a biologically important process (usually, though not necessarily, a single molecule), preferably one central to a hallmark of cancer. The target should be measurable in the clinic, and measurement of the target (in either quantitative or qualitative terms) should correlate with clinical outcome when the targeted therapy is administered’’. Targeted therapies Working definition: Drugs aimed at specific (functional) targets of (some) cancer cells Targeted therapies Working definition: Drugs aimed at specific targets of (some) cancer cell 1° example: TamoxifenEstrogen receptors in breast cancer cells Recent examples (Targets) Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (Anti-EGFR) Vascular Endothelial Growth factor (anti-VEGF) Human epidermal growth factor receptor (anti-HER2) Protein products of oncogenes (e.g. BRC/Abl) Multitargeted agents Other pathways/receptors Recent examples (drugs) Monoclonal Antibodies (xxxx…ab) Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (xxx…ib) Other Inhibitors (mTOR, FTI,etc) (xxxx….ib) Others Recent examples Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (Anti-EGFR) Monoclonal Antibodies (xxxx…ab) Vascular Endothelial Growth factor (anti-VEGF) Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (xxx…ib) Human epidermal growth factor receptor (anti-HER2) Other inhibitors (xxxx….ib) Protein products of oncogenes (e.g. BRC/Abl) Multitargeted agents Other pathways/receptors Others Common Issues • Low toxicity? (interactions with CTX?) Common Issues • Low toxicity (interactions with CTX?) • Direct cell killing?Reduction in tumor size? Objective Response plausible? Marginal effects Common Issues • Low toxicity (interactions with CTX?) • Moderate/low anticancer activity (response rate) Common Issues • Low toxicity (interactions with CTX?) • Moderate/low anticancer activity (response rate) • Dose-Response? Often Unlikely Common Issues • • • • Low toxicity (interactions with CTX?) Moderate/low anticancer activity (response rate) Dose-Response? Often Unlikely Transient effect – Treatment duration – Resistance (partial, reversible) Common Issues • • • • • Low toxicity (interactions with CTX?) Moderate/low anticancer activity (response rate) Dose-Response? Often Unlikely Transient effect Effect only in the presence of the target? Common Issues • • • • • • Low toxicity (interactions with CTX?) Moderate/low anticancer activity (response rate) Dose-Response? Often Unlikely Transient effect Effect only in the presence of the target? Positive interaction with CTX/RTX? Common Issues • • • • • • • Low toxicity (interactions with CTX?) Moderate/low anticancer activity (response rate) Dose-Response? Often Unlikely Transient effect Effect only in the presence of the target? Positive interaction with CTX/RTX? Activity independent of tumor size? (Yes?) Consequences Trials of novel therapies • Phase I: Dose? • Phase II: Activity? • Phase III: Effectiveness? New Methodology Phase I trials of targeted therapies MTD-Optimal Dose -Lowest effective Dose? • • • • • Safety Dose-toxicity Pharmacokinetics (e.g. saturation) (MTD)? Biologically Effective Dose (Biologic endpoints from animal/human models) • Dose/Activity (Phase I-II) Phase I-II trials of targeted therapies Study design (for dose-activity) • • • • • • Larger size Randomization? (e.g. different doses) Patients? Duration of treatment? Single agent or + CTX? Endpoint? Phase II (or I-II) trials Main Challenge How to assess the activity of novel therapies? Design and conduct of phase II studies of targeted anticancer therapy: Recommendations from the task force on methodology for the development of innovative cancer therapies (MDICT) - Boot et al, Eur J Cancer 2007 Approach used in the development of some novel anticancer therapies • Phase IA: Safety, Toxicity Biological Marker ? • Phase III: Efficacy Phase II (or I-II) trials Reasons for phase II trials (Simon, JCO 2001): • Economy: Insufficient resources to test all drugs in all tumor types by phase III trials Phase II (or I-II) trials Reasons for phase II trials (Simon, JCO 2001): • Economy • Ethics: inappropriate to expose large numbers of pts in a phase III trial to an agent with no demonstrated activity. Phase II (or I-II) trials Reasons for phase II trials (Simon, JCO 2001): • Economy • Ethics • Opportunity: chance to modify dose of the agent or to better select the target population for the phase III trials Phase II (or I-II) trials Reasons for phase II trials (Simon, JCO 2001): • Economy • Ethics • Opportunity • Science, i.e. statistics: Results of subsequent phase III trial – Positive: More convincing – Negative: Can be interpreted Phase II (or I-II) trials of targeted therapies 1. Endpoint 2. Design 3. Selection of patients Phase II (or I-II) trials Activity Endpoint Design Selection of pts a) Endpoints of Phase II (or I-II) trials Activity endpoints vs Surrogate endpoints Endpoints in phase II trials Activity Endpoints: Assess mechanisms, direct effects on the disease/organism Endpoints in phase II trials Activity Endpoints: Surrogate endpoints: Intermediate events/markers/ parameters that (are assumed to) reflect the effects of the treatment on the true endpoint Endpoints Surrogate endpoints Activity Endpoints Activity endpoints may not be valid surrogate’ endpoints • Antiarythmic drugs – Effects on arythmia Effects on sudden deaths Cast trial: active antiarythmic drugs increased SD mortality Activity endpoints may not be valid surrogate’ endpoints • Screening tests – Earlier diagnosis Reduction in mortality? Mayo clinic lung project: earlier diagnosis but no decrease in mortality Activity endpoints may not be valid surrogate’ endpoints • (Chemo)prevention – Incidence Mortality? Tamoxifen in BC? Plausible surrogate endpoints may not be activity endpoints Endpoint Surrogate Activity Obj. response yes ? For cytotoxic drugs RFS yes ? No PFS yes ? No Endpoints in phase II trials Phase II trials, if possible, should use Activity endpoints – Stronger rationale for phase III trials – Smaller size – Negative Phase III can be interpreted Endpoints in phase II trials Phase II trials, if possible, should use Activity endpoints If not possible, plausible (validated?) surrogate endpoints are acceptable Endpoints in Phase II (I-II) trials 1. Biological Activity Tumor tissue markers, circ. tum. cells, plasma/serum markers, metabolic imaging, etc. Endpoints in Phase II (I-II) trials 1. Biological Example: The smallest dose that inhibited the phosphorylation of CRKL, an adapter protein that is a major substrate of the deregulated BCR/ABL tyrosine kinase and is aberrantly tyrosine-phosphorylated in chromosome Philadelphia-positive leukemia cells, was 400 mg. (Rosa DD et al., Molecular-targeted therapies: Lessons from ..., Cancer Treat Rev (2007), doi:10.1016/j.ctrv.2007.07.019) Endpoints in Phase II (I-II) trials 1. Biological Example: Results from a phase I study evaluating cetuximab in patients with advanced solid tumours expressing EGFR showed that it effectively abrogated EGFR-mediated cell signalling, with no alteration in total EGFR protein. (Rosa DD et al., Molecular-targeted therapies: Lessons from ..., Cancer Treat Rev (2007), doi:10.1016/j.ctrv.2007.07.019) Biological endpoints - Sensitivity and Specificity of the Endpoint - Sensitive: Representative of the mode of action of the treatment - Specific: Does not show spontaneous modifications Biological Endpoints Specific Target - Eligibility restricted Stronger effect (Smaller sample size) More convincing evidence Biological Endpoints Specific Target Not specific (e.g. TLI) - Weaker effect (large sample size) Need for a randomised control group Less convincing evidence Biological Endpoints - Sensitivity and Specificity of the Endpoint? (preclin. studies, studies in other cancers, with similar treatments) Wrong endpoint effective treatment discarded Biological Endpoints - Sensitivity and Specificity of the Endpoint? - Eligible patients - Measurable target - Patients amenable to multiple biopsies - Organizational and clinical burden Biological Endpoints - Sensitivity and Specificity of the Endpoint? - Eligible patients - Sufficient evidence to start a phase III trial? Endpoints in Phase II (I-II) trials 2. Clinical (surrogate) Endpoints Endpoints in Phase II (I-II) trials 2. Clinical (surrogate) Endpoints • Objective response – Plausible? – Specific (>50% reduction in tumor mass within few months) – Sensitive? If not observed, the treatment can be discarded as inactive? Endpoints in Phase II (I-II) trials 2. Clinical (surrogate) Endpoints • Objective response • Time to progression/relapse (median TTP, % Progression- free at 6 months, etc.) Endpoints in Phase II (I-II) trials 2. Clinical (surrogate) Endpoints • Objective response • Time to progression/relapse – – – – Historical data unreliable (control group?) Randomised? 2 stage designs? Sample Size? (close to phase III trials) Time to Progression/Relapse Surrogate endpoint! If a relevant effect on TTP is seen in a phase II trial, is the randomised Phase III trial still ethical? Endpoints in Phase II (I-II) trials 2. Clinical Endpoints • Objective response • Time to progression/relapse • Clinical Benefit (QoL, improvement in symtoms, combined endpoints) – Validated? – Same problems of TTP b) Designs in Phase II (I-II) trials 1. Single-arm designs • • • Absolute values (e.g. 50% resp. Rate) Relative to Historical Controls Before-after designs – – – Regression to the mean? Natural history of the tumor? Bias? Designs in Phase II (I-II) trials 1. Single-arm designs: Can be used if a) The endpoint is very specific or b) Historical data are very solid and stable and c) The endpoint can be assessed objectively/unbiasedly Designs in Phase II (I-II) trials 1. Single-arm designs 2. Non-comparative randomised trials Used to select the most active drug(s) among a series of drugs/combinations Problems in the interpretation of results Seldom used with novel therapies Designs in Phase II (I-II) trials 1. Single-arm designs 2. Non-comparative randomised trials 3. Randomised comparative Phase II trials • Necessary for non specific endpoints • Sample Size < than in Phase III trials • Various designs (e.g. random discontinuation) Randomised Phase II (I-II) trials Control arm • Untreated ? – – – Responding/Stable pts after standard therapy Patients not candidate to further therapies To encourage pts to participate • • If endpoint is TTP, cross-over after progression If biological endpoint, cross over after its assessment Randomised Phase II (I-II) trials Control arm • Untreated ? • Standard (chemo)therapy? – – Same chemotherapy also in exp. arm Negative/positive interactions? Randomised Phase II (I-II) trials Reduced Sample Size • Large Effect (esp. for biological endpoints) • Relaxed significance level – – • 0.10 (-23%) 0.20 (- 47%) Stopping rules for evidence of futility (clearly inactive treatment) c) Selection of patients for Phase II trials – Bearing the (presumed) target • Increased power 0,9 0,8 0,7 0,6 0,5 0,4 0,3 0,2 0,1 0 =0.05 =0-2 Frequency of the target 90 % 10 0% 80 % 70 % 60 % 50 % 40 % 30 % 182 patients 20 % 10 % Power Trial in Unselected patients - Response rate from 20% to 40% (in pts with the target) Target? • Not always a yes/no phenomenon (e.g. number of copies of HER2) • Reliability of assessement (technique, interintra-laboratory variability) • Necessary but not sufficient (e.g. EGFR and Kras mutation) • Sufficient but not necessary (e.g. multitargeted agents) c) Selection of patients for Phase II trials – Bearing the (presumed) target • Increased power • Only if strong biologic rationale • Risk if wrong target Phase II (I-II) trials Selection of patients – With the (presumed) target – All patients • Identification a posteriori of markers of susceptibility (targets) • Much larger sample size (if true target) 182 pts 300 pts 182 patients All available pts 600 pts Frequency of the target 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 900 pts 20% 0,9 0,8 0,7 0,6 0,5 0,4 0,3 0,2 0,1 0 10% Power Unselected patients Phase II (I-II) trials Selection of patients – With the (presumed) target – All patients – ‘Enriched’ populations (unbalanced sampling of pts with the target) 3-400 pts: 50% with the mutation 300 pts 182 pts 182 patients All available pts 600 pts Frequency of the target 90 % 10 0% 70 % 80 % 60 % 50 % 30 % 40 % 900 pts 20 % 0,9 0,8 0,7 0,6 0,5 0,4 0,3 0,2 0,1 0 10 % Power ‘Enriched’ populations Efficacy Trials of Novel Therapies • Standard RCT’s – Overall Survival surrogates) • Peculiarities – – – – – Selected patients (target present) Organizational burden Costs Long-term toxicity (smaller size/larger effect)? (or Development of a ‘novel’ therapy Strong preclinical evidence of activity on the target Development of a ‘novel’ therapy Strong preclinical evidence of activity Phase IA: Safety Development of a ‘novel’ therapy Strong preclinical evidence of activity Phase IA: Safety Phase I-II Dose-response Randomised Comparison Biological endopint Stop if no activity – Unselected pts Development of a ‘novel’ therapy Strong preclinical evidence of activity Phase IA: Safety Phase I-II Dose-response Phase IIB Randomised Comparison Biological endopint Stop if no activity – Unselected pts Surrogate endpoint (sel. Pts?) Development of a ‘novel’ therapy Strong preclinical evidence of activity Phase IA: Safety Phase I-II Dose-response Phase IIB Randomised Comparison Biological endopint Stop if no activity – Unselected pts Surrogate endpoint (sel. Pts) Efficacy (OS, PFS, RFS) Development of a ‘novel’ therapy Strong preclinical evidence of activity Phase IA: Safety Phase I-II Dose-response Phase IIB Randomised Comparison Biological endopint Stop if no activity – Unselected pts Surrogate endpoint (sel. Pts) Stop if no difference with control arm (futility) or toxicity Efficacy (OS, PFS, RFS) Development of a ‘novel’ therapy Strong preclinical evidence of activity Phase IA: Safety Phase I-II Dose-response Phase IIB Stop random if suff. evid. of efficacy Randomised Comparison Biological endopint Stop if no activity – Unselected pts Surrogate endpoint (sel. Pts) Stop if no difference with control arm (futility) or toxicity Efficacy (OS, PFS, RFS) Development of targeted therapies Bayesian Statistics 1. To monitor study results for early stop 2. To use validated surrogate endpoints 3. To extrapolate results across cancers of different sites bearing the same target • A therapy targeted at a specific mutation in gene X has been demonstrated in RCT’s to improve survival in resected pts with the mutation (20%), (lung c. , colon c., prostate c. and breast c.), with reductions in mortality of 20-40% • A therapy targeted at a specific mutation in gene X has been demonstrated in RCT’s to improve survival in resected pts with the mutation (10%), (lung c. , colon c., prostate c. and breast c.), with reductions in mortality of 20-40% • We want to show its efficacy (phase III trial) in osteosarcomas with the same mutation • A therapy targeted at a specific mutation in gene X has been demonstrated in RCT’s to improve survival in reseted pts with the mutation (10%), (lung c. , colon c., prostate c. and breast c.), with reductions in mortality of 20-40% • We want to show its efficacy (phase III trial) in osteosarcomas with the same mutation • Null Hypothesis? - Evidence needed to accept the efficacy of the new treatment in osteosarcomas? Test of significance? Mortality Other Tumors N=12000 Osteosarcoma N= 240 Nil vs B 15% vs 12.5% P = 0.0007 Nil vs B 15% vs 8.3% P = 0.11 Summary • The assessment of the activity of a treatment is critical in its development • The methodology of trials derives from the therapeutic paradygm • A priority of modern cancer research is the identification of efficient (sensitive and specific) markers of activity for phase II trials of novel drugs Conclusions • Development of cytotoxic drugs – – Fixed Standard Methodologies Roles: • • • Phase I - Pharmacologist Phase II – Oncologist (+Statistician/Simon‘s tables) Phase III – Oncologist + Statistician (sample size and analysis) Conclusions • Development of novel drugs – Specific (original) methodology developed, monitored and re-adjusted for each new drug – Roles: • Multidisciplinary teams (Basic Researcher+Oncologist+Statistician) working together in the design, conduct and interpretation of all phases of development Traditional Role of the Statistician Tell me, Paolo, how many patients do I need for…..? ..back to the PC….and… …for alfa=0.0001 and power 99.999% you need 806,913.8 patients! New duties of the statistician Learn about biology! New duties of the statistician Think! New duties of the statistician Listen, propose and discuss! Think again! Until you find a rational solution