GIST Clinical Trial Update:
Imatinib and Surgery
Clinical Management of GIST
Helsinki and Barcelona 2003-Conference Highlights
Note: *Represents new information added after the Helsinki and Barcelona Conferences. Information known to be out of date has been removed. Note: on December 29, 2008, the FDA approved Gleevec as an adjuvant treatment (preventative) for GIST. FDA approves Gleevec to prevent recurrence of GIST
A major focus of current clinical studies involving patients with GIST is to clarify the roles of surgery and systemic therapy with imatinib in the management of the disease. Burton Eisenberg, MD, of Norris Cotton Cancer Center in Lebanon, New Hampshire USA, provided an update during the 3rd International Symposium on GIST in Helsinki.
Adjuvant trials
The initial study is the American College of Surgeons Oncology Group (ACOSOG) phase II trial of postoperative, adjuvant imatinib therapy for high-risk GIST patients (Table 3). This trial is now closed, having met its patient accrual goal by mid-2003. Data are now in the accumulation phase. Of interest is the rapidity with which the full cohort of patients was enrolled. It appears that there was a significant number of well-informed patients and physicians who were willing to consider an adjuvant clinical trial.
The ACOSOG phase III trial was
initiated in light of an issue
that arose with respect to the
phase II trial—that a study of
adjuvant imatinib therapy needed
to be designed in answer to a
genuine phase III “question”,
entailing comparison with an
untreated group. Consequently,
the phase III trial enrolled
GIST patients who have less
overall risk of recurrence.
Patient accrual is complete.
The ACOSOG phase III trial
addresses the question of
whether there is a long-term
benefit from adjuvant imatinib
use in intermediate-risk GIST
patients. Other compelling
questions may remain open,
however, including timing of
therapy. For example, could the
drug be started at the time of
recurrence for patients in
postoperative relapse, with
similar results? Dosage is not
under investigation in either of
the ACOSOG trials; patients
begin therapy at 400 mg/d.
*On April 12, 2007, the American College of Surgeons Oncology Group (ACOSOG) announced that the Z9001 phase III trial was closed having successfully met its endpoint. The trial began recruiting GIST patients in 2002 and ended in April 2002. In December, 2008, the FDA approved Gleevec for adjuvant therapy in GIST based on the results of this trial.
In April, 2007, an independent data-monitoring committee announced that the trial had crossed the previously established boundary for recurrence-free survival and had thus met its primary endpoint with a highly significant hazard ratio of 3.1. The interim analysis showed a 97 percent recurrence-free survival rate for the Gleevec group as opposed to an 83 percent survival rate for those on the placebo. Taking Gleevec for one year after surgery significantly increased the time before a GIST recurrence.
The EORTC Soft Tissue and Bone Sarcoma Group also is comparing adjuvant imatinib administration versus no postoperative pharmacotherapy in a clinical trial with a projected enrollment of 400 patients. Patients with completely resected GIST, stratified according to pathologically complete (R0) or marginal (R1) excision, intermediate or high risk, and gastric or other site, will be assigned randomly to receive either imatinib, 400 mg/d for 2 years, or no treatment. The study is designed to detect an improvement in 5-year survival from 50% to 65%.
The Scandinavian Sarcoma Group trial (SSGXVII), currently open for accrual, is seeking 80 patients from Germany and the Scandinavian countries for an open-label, randomized, phase II, multicenter trial. Following radical surgery, patients with high-risk GIST will be randomly assigned to either 12 or 36 months of adjuvant imatinib at 400 mg/d, with the primary end point being recurrence-free survival. Secondary end points will be safety and overall survival.
Neoadjuvant trial
Under investigation within a phase II trial design by the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) is whether imatinib therapy should be given before surgery for GIST (neoadjuvant therapy). The patients in this study tend to have either a bulky primary GIST or recurrent or metastatic tumors that are potentially operable. The question is how to integrate surgery for GIST with targeted systemic therapy. When does one surgically intervene, and will the result of a dual approach for these very-high-risk patients be evidenced by prolonged survival?
Another objective of the RTOG
study is to obtain tissue from
patients’ tumors before
treatment with imatinib and
again during (post-imatinib)
surgical resection to further
define some of the molecular
mechanisms of response to the
drug and correlate the molecular
data with clinical and FDG-PET
findings. The plan is to
evaluate each patient’s tumor
for mutational status; to
examine the
phosphorylated
protein
kinases that are part of
the KIT pathway; and to begin to
explore some of the differences
in gene expression before and
after imatinib therapy. These substudies will include
microarray analysis. Ultimately,
the goal of these investigations
is to correlate the mutational
status, the protein activation
status, and the genomic profile.
|
Clinical Trials: Adjuvant Imatinib Trials for GIST |
||||
| Trial | Description | |||
|
|
Phase II Study of Adjuvant Imatinib Mesylate in Patients With Completely Resected High-Risk Primary GIST (ACOSOG-Z9000) | End points:
survival, 2- and 5-year
recurrence rates, toxicity;
imatinib therapy initiated
within 84 days of surgical
resection, continuing for 1
year; enrollment complete (N
= 110) |
||
| Phase III Randomized Study of Adjuvant Imatinib Mesylate in Patients With Resected Primary GIST (ACOSOG-Z9001) | End points: overall, recurrence-free survival; imatinib or placebo administered postoperatively for 1 year, with crossover to imatinib if recurrence; projected enrollment *This trial is now closed having successfully met it's endpoint. In December, 2008, the FDA approved adjuvant Gleevec in the U.S. based on the results of this trial. |
|||
| EORTC Soft Tissue and Bone Sarcoma Group (EORTC-62024) randomized phase III trial | End points: overall, recurrence-free survival; risk stratification/randomization after complete GIST resection to imatinib or no treatment for 2 years; projected enrollment = 400 |
|||
| Scandinavian Sarcoma Group Trial SSGXVIII | End points: recurrence-free survival, safety, overall survival; imatinib administered postoperatively for 12 or 36 months; projected enrollment = 80 |
|||
| Phase II Study of Neoadjuvant and Adjuvant Imatinib Mesylate in Patients With Primary or Recurrent Potentially Resectable Malignant GIST (RTOG-S0132) | End points: progression-free survival, objective response rate, safety; 8 weeks of imatinib therapy, then surgical debulking of all gross tumor and reinstitution of imatinib for 2 years; projected enrollment = 63 |
|||
| *Post-Marketing Clinical Study of Postoperative Adjuvant Therapy With Imatinib Mesylate in Patients With Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors (GIST) (CNT00171977) | *End points: relapse-free survival in high-risk GIST patients receiving 400 mg of Gleevec for one year, and survival for three years after surgery for their primary tumors. Location: Tokyo, Japan |
|||
| *Phase
II Study of Neoadjuvant
Imatinib Mesylate in
Patients With Locally
Advanced Gastrointestinal
Stromal Tumor (Germany/Austria) |
*End points: Primary: objective response rates and histological response rates. Secondary: R0-resectability and organ-preserving resectability, correlate radiographic and metabolic imaging with response. projected enrollment = 40 |
|||
|
||||
Warning: date() [function.date]: It is not safe to rely on the system's timezone settings. You are *required* to use the date.timezone setting or the date_default_timezone_set() function. In case you used any of those methods and you are still getting this warning, you most likely misspelled the timezone identifier. We selected 'America/Chicago' for 'CST/-6.0/no DST' instead in /home/liferaft/public_html/sources/layout.php on line 478
Warning: date() [function.date]: It is not safe to rely on the system's timezone settings. You are *required* to use the date.timezone setting or the date_default_timezone_set() function. In case you used any of those methods and you are still getting this warning, you most likely misspelled the timezone identifier. We selected 'America/Chicago' for 'CST/-6.0/no DST' instead in /home/liferaft/public_html/sources/layout.php on line 478




