TY - JOUR
T1 - Adavosertib plus gemcitabine for platinum-resistant or platinum-refractory recurrent ovarian cancer
T2 - a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, phase 2 trial
AU - Lheureux, Stephanie
AU - Cristea, Mihaela C.
AU - Bruce, Jeffrey P.
AU - Garg, Swati
AU - Cabanero, Michael
AU - Mantia-Smaldone, Gina
AU - Olawaiye, Alexander B.
AU - Ellard, Susan L.
AU - Weberpals, Johanne I.
AU - Wahner Hendrickson, Andrea E.
AU - Fleming, Gini F.
AU - Welch, Stephen
AU - Dhani, Neesha C.
AU - Stockley, Tracy
AU - Rath, Prisni
AU - Karakasis, Katherine
AU - Jones, Gemma N.
AU - Jenkins, Suzanne
AU - Rodriguez-Canales, Jaime
AU - Tracy, Michael
AU - Tan, Qian
AU - Bowering, Valerie
AU - Udagani, Smitha
AU - Wang, Lisa
AU - Kunos, Charles A.
AU - Chen, Eric
AU - Pugh, Trevor J.
AU - Oza, Amit M.
N1 - Funding Information:
The funders Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation, US Department of Defense, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, and US National Cancer Institute Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program supported trial conduct, patient enrolment, drug supply, genomic analysis, and analysis of samples and AstraZeneca provided study drug and some funds for genomic analysis through the US National Cancer Institute Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program, and did SLFN11 testing. However, the funders of the study had no role in study design, data collection, data analysis, data interpretation, or writing of the report. All authors had full access to all the data in the study and had final responsibility for the decision to submit for publication.
Funding Information:
SL is principal investigator and co-investigator of several industry trials and has received honoraria from AstraZeneca, Merck, Roche, and GSK for consulting. MCC reports personal fees from AstraZeneca and AbbVie outside of the submitted work. GM-S reports a consulting and advisory role for Tesaro. SLE reports honoraria for advisory boards from AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Astellas, and Ipsen, and ownership of stocks in AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb, GSK, and Pfizer. JIW reports a consulting and advisory role for AstraZeneca and research funding from AbbVie and AstraZeneca. GFF reports grants from the US National Cancer Institute (NCI) during the conduct of the study; grants from EMD Serono, Roche/Genentech, Syros, Tesaro/GSK, Iovance, Sanofi, Sermonix, Incyte, Compugen, AbbVie, Eisai, Celldex, AstraZeneca, Corcept, Merck, and Plexxicon; non-financial support from Corcept; and personal fees from Tesaro/GSK, all outside of the submitted work. NCD reports honoraria for sponsored talks for AstraZeneca and a grant supporting fellow salary from Celgene. TS reports grants and personal fees from AstraZeneca outside of the submitted work. GNJ reports personal fees from AstraZeneca during the conduct of the study and has a US provisional patent application pending. SJ reports personal fees from AstraZeneca outside of the submitted work and is an employee and shareholder of AstraZeneca. JR-C reports personal fees from AstraZeneca during the conduct of the study. VB is a GSK Nursing Advisory Board Member and an AstraZeneca Olaparib Advisory Board Member. EC reports personal fees from Bayer, Taiho, Eisai, and Roche, outside of the submitted work. TJP reports personal fees from Illumina, Merck, Canadian Pension Plan, and Chrysalis Biomedical Advisors outside of the submitted work. AMO reports grants from NCI Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program, US Department of Defense, and Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation during the conduct of the study, grants paid to his institution from AstraZeneca outside of the submitted work; uncompensated Steering Committee roles with AstraZeneca and Clovis; uncompensated advisory roles with AstraZeneca and GSK; and principal investigator roles on investigator-initiated trials with agents from AstraZeneca, GSK, and Clovis. All other authors declare no competing interests.
Funding Information:
This study was supported by Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation, the US National Cancer Institute Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program (trial conduct, patient enrolment, drug supply), US Department of Defense Ovarian Cancer Research Program (award number W81XWH-12-1-0501; TP53 Sanger sequencing, some genomic analysis of paired biopsies, obtaining biopsy samples, immunohistochemistry for TP53), Ontario Institute for Cancer Research (genomic analysis of tissue biopsies), and AstraZeneca. Funding to support clinical trial NCI9568 was provided through the NCI Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program (contract N01-CM-2011-0032 and grant ETCTN1UM1CA186644–011).We acknowledge additional statistical advice and support from Wei Xu and Naoko Takebe. We also thank our patients, the study team, and funding agencies. Editorial support was provided by Jennifer Kelly (Medi-Kelsey, Ashbourne, UK) funded by Princess Margaret Cancer Centre.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2021/1/23
Y1 - 2021/1/23
N2 - Background: The Wee1 (WEE1hu) inhibitor adavosertib and gemcitabine have shown preclinical synergy and promising activity in early phase clinical trials. We aimed to determine the efficacy of this combination in patients with ovarian cancer. Methods: In this double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, phase 2 trial, women with measurable recurrent platinum-resistant or platinum-refractory high-grade serous ovarian cancer were recruited from 11 academic centres in the USA and Canada. Women were eligible if they were aged 18 years or older, had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0–2, a life expectancy of more than 3 months, and normal organ and marrow function. Women with ovarian cancer of non-high-grade serous histology were eligible for enrolment in a non-randomised exploratory cohort. Eligible participants with high-grade serous ovarian cancer were randomly assigned (2:1), using block randomisation (block size of three and six) and no stratification, to receive intravenous gemcitabine (1000 mg/m2 on days 1, 8, and 15) with either oral adavosertib (175 mg) or identical placebo once daily on days 1, 2, 8, 9, 15, and 16, in 28-day cycles until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. Patients and the team caring for each patient were masked to treatment assignment. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival. The safety and efficacy analysis population comprised all patients who received at least one dose of treatment. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02151292, and is closed to accrual. Findings: Between Sept 22, 2014, and May 30, 2018, 124 women were enrolled, of whom 99 had high-grade serous ovarian cancer and were randomly assigned to adavosertib plus gemcitabine (65 [66%]) or placebo plus gemcitabine (34 [34%]). 25 women with non-high-grade serous ovarian cancer were enrolled in the exploratory cohort. After randomisation, five patients with high-grade serous ovarian cancer were found to be ineligible (four in the experimental group and one in the control group) and did not receive treatment. Median age for all treated patients (n=119) was 62 years (IQR 54–67). Progression-free survival was longer with adavosertib plus gemcitabine (median 4·6 months [95% CI 3·6–6·4] with adavosertib plus gemcitabine vs 3·0 months [1·8–3·8] with placebo plus gemcitabine; hazard ratio 0·55 [95% CI 0·35–0·90]; log-rank p=0·015). The most frequent grade 3 or worse adverse events were haematological (neutropenia in 38 [62%] of 61 participants in the adavosertib plus gemcitabine group vs ten [30%] of 33 in the placebo plus gemcitabine group; thrombocytopenia in 19 [31%] of 61 in the adavosertib plus gemcitabine group vs two [6%] of 33 in the placebo plus gemcitabine group). There were no treatment-related deaths; two patients (one in each group in the high-grade serous ovarian cancer cohort) died while on study medication (from sepsis in the experimental group and from disease progression in the control group). Interpretation: The observed clinical efficacy of a Wee1 inhibitor combined with gemcitabine supports ongoing assessment of DNA damage response drugs in high-grade serous ovarian cancer, a TP53-mutated tumour type with high replication stress. This therapeutic approach might be applicable to other tumour types with high replication stress; larger confirmatory studies are required. Funding: US National Cancer Institute Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, US Department of Defense, Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation, and AstraZeneca.
AB - Background: The Wee1 (WEE1hu) inhibitor adavosertib and gemcitabine have shown preclinical synergy and promising activity in early phase clinical trials. We aimed to determine the efficacy of this combination in patients with ovarian cancer. Methods: In this double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, phase 2 trial, women with measurable recurrent platinum-resistant or platinum-refractory high-grade serous ovarian cancer were recruited from 11 academic centres in the USA and Canada. Women were eligible if they were aged 18 years or older, had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0–2, a life expectancy of more than 3 months, and normal organ and marrow function. Women with ovarian cancer of non-high-grade serous histology were eligible for enrolment in a non-randomised exploratory cohort. Eligible participants with high-grade serous ovarian cancer were randomly assigned (2:1), using block randomisation (block size of three and six) and no stratification, to receive intravenous gemcitabine (1000 mg/m2 on days 1, 8, and 15) with either oral adavosertib (175 mg) or identical placebo once daily on days 1, 2, 8, 9, 15, and 16, in 28-day cycles until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. Patients and the team caring for each patient were masked to treatment assignment. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival. The safety and efficacy analysis population comprised all patients who received at least one dose of treatment. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02151292, and is closed to accrual. Findings: Between Sept 22, 2014, and May 30, 2018, 124 women were enrolled, of whom 99 had high-grade serous ovarian cancer and were randomly assigned to adavosertib plus gemcitabine (65 [66%]) or placebo plus gemcitabine (34 [34%]). 25 women with non-high-grade serous ovarian cancer were enrolled in the exploratory cohort. After randomisation, five patients with high-grade serous ovarian cancer were found to be ineligible (four in the experimental group and one in the control group) and did not receive treatment. Median age for all treated patients (n=119) was 62 years (IQR 54–67). Progression-free survival was longer with adavosertib plus gemcitabine (median 4·6 months [95% CI 3·6–6·4] with adavosertib plus gemcitabine vs 3·0 months [1·8–3·8] with placebo plus gemcitabine; hazard ratio 0·55 [95% CI 0·35–0·90]; log-rank p=0·015). The most frequent grade 3 or worse adverse events were haematological (neutropenia in 38 [62%] of 61 participants in the adavosertib plus gemcitabine group vs ten [30%] of 33 in the placebo plus gemcitabine group; thrombocytopenia in 19 [31%] of 61 in the adavosertib plus gemcitabine group vs two [6%] of 33 in the placebo plus gemcitabine group). There were no treatment-related deaths; two patients (one in each group in the high-grade serous ovarian cancer cohort) died while on study medication (from sepsis in the experimental group and from disease progression in the control group). Interpretation: The observed clinical efficacy of a Wee1 inhibitor combined with gemcitabine supports ongoing assessment of DNA damage response drugs in high-grade serous ovarian cancer, a TP53-mutated tumour type with high replication stress. This therapeutic approach might be applicable to other tumour types with high replication stress; larger confirmatory studies are required. Funding: US National Cancer Institute Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, US Department of Defense, Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation, and AstraZeneca.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0140-6736(20)32554-X
DO - 10.1016/S0140-6736(20)32554-X
M3 - Article
C2 - 33485453
AN - SCOPUS:85099630769
SN - 0140-6736
VL - 397
SP - 281
EP - 292
JO - The Lancet
JF - The Lancet
IS - 10271
ER -