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July 5, 2007


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New Trial Starting, Studying Avastin with Adjuvant Chemo

   At long last, and after years of planning, a new large phase III randomized clinical trial is getting underway to determine whether adding avastin to chemotherapy as post-operative (adjuvant) treatment for early stage NSCLC provides added benefit compared to chemotherapy alone.  This trial, led by the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) and with the principal investigator Heather Wakelee of Stanford, is designated E1505 and will randomize 1500 patients with stage IB (tumors of 4 cm or larger only) or stage II or IIIA NSCLC to receive four cycles of any one of three chemo regimens alone or with avastin, and the avastin arm will also receive ongoing avastin for up to a year:

E1505 schema (Click to enlarge)

Avastin is of great interest in this setting because adding avastin to chemo improved survival for eligible patients with advanced NSCLC by a couple of months (post here), and perhaps a better result in post-op treatment for early stage, surgical disease would translate to a significant increase in the actual cure rate for NSCLC.  

   A few key points here are that only cisplatin-based chemotherapy regimens are permitted here, because cisplatin-based chemo has been proven to confer a survival benefit as adjuvant treatment, but the same hasn’t yet been seen with carboplatin-based chemotherapy (carbo/taxol was included in earlier versions of the trial, but this regimen was dropped after the results from the CALGB 9633 trial (abstract here) became negative).  Interestingly, although cisplatin/gemcitabine and cisplatin/taxotere haven’t been proven in adjuvant chemo trials to improve survival, there have been so many studies showing nearly identical activity of these cisplatin doublets that everyone pretty much agrees that it makes sense to provide several alternatives.  The stage IB patients are allowed to be enrolled if they have a tumor of 4 cm or larger, because this subgroup received a benefit from chemo on the CALGB 9633 trial, while those with smaller tumors did not (also described in a prior post here).  Finally, the trial will enroll patients who have had squamous cancers resected, because while those with squamous tumors have a higher risk of bleeding in the advanced NSCLC setting, in the adjuvant setting the cancer has been removed, so the risk of bleeding would not be anticipated to be higher in people with a resected squamous tumor compared with other NSCLC subtypes.

  This is considered one of the most important questions in the field of early stage lung cancer, so all of the major cooperative groups in North America are joining in this effort to enroll.  We can only hope that doctors and patients will be willing to participate.  Although Avastin may provide a significant improvement in the cure rate, it’s possible that it will add only increased side effects — the clinical trials with avastin show an increased risk of bleeding, high blood pressure, headaches, and sometimes lower blood counts and increased risk of infection. I wouldn’t presume I know how it will turn out, but I do think that it may lead to another stepwise improvement in our treatment of lung cancer; if not, it will still have been worth looking carefully for the right answer about the balance of activity and side effect profile. 

   Importantly, this trial will also collect tissue and blood samples from participants so that we can learn more about the proteins and genes that predict how cancers will behave, and how we might predict who is more likely to benefit from chemo and/or avastin treatment and who is more likely to just experience the adverse effects of treatments.

   For those interested in learning more, information on the trial is located here and here. Although it’s just getting started now (July 2007), participating sites should become increasingly available throughout North America in the next several weeks and months.



posted by Dr. West @ 9:34 pm link to this post

2 Responses to “New Trial Starting, Studying Avastin with Adjuvant Chemo”

  1. 1
    dadawg001 Says:

    Any studies on the horizon to add Avastin to standard platinum based chemoradiotherapy for SCLC?

    Seems like chemoradiotherapy combination has resulted in significant improvements to survival for SCLC. I just wonder if you add Avastin into the mix if it might be of some additional benefit.

    Jim

  2. 2
    Dr. West Says:

    Jim,

      Very soon, I’ll describe a couple of trials combining Avastin with chemo in ED-SCLC, but with radiation, avastin has been associated with a few episodes of tracheoesophageal fistula development, which is a hole connecting the trachea (windpipe) to the esophagus. This is a serious complication, and it’s been seen in far more patients than would be expected in a general lung cancer population in the NSCLC trials where avastin and chemoradiation have been combined. Right now, things are moving very slowly and cautiously in terms of adding avastin with chemoradiation in ongoing lung cancer trials.

      While the earlier stage trials in NSCLC and SCLC (and most other cancers) are where new treatments can make the greatest differences (potentially increasing cure rates instead of usually more limited goals of improving survival in advanced disease), the stakes are higher and there’s more worry about detrimental effects of new treatments in earlier stage patients who may already be cured.  Because of that, new treatments tend to get studied more extensively first in advanced stages of cancer, and then get moved into earlier stages if the treatment appears safe and beneficial.

    -Dr. West

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About the Author:
Howard (Jack) West, MD
Dr. West serves as the Founder and Managing Member of OncTalk, LLC. He is a medical oncologist and Director of Medical Therapeutics for Thoracic Oncology at the Swedish Cancer Institute in Seattle, Washington.
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Disclaimer: The information provided at OncTalk is for informational purposes only. Howard West, MD is not providing medical advice, diagnosis or treatment and cannot replace the medical advice of your doctor or health care provider.