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VIDEO: Everolimus/letrozole promising for recurrent endometrial cancer

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Regimen produced provocative results but needs more evaluation

The results from this study are exciting, with fairly compelling response rates. The rate of progression-free survival with everolimus and letrozole treatment is very impressive, compared with traditional chemotherapy using carboplatin and paclitaxel. The median progression-free survival rate of 21.6 months seen among the chemotherapy naive patients who received everolimus and letrozole showed a 7-month edge over the 14-month median progression-free survival previously reported with chemotherapy. This difference is very provocative and could be practice changing, but it of course needs further evaluation.

Dr. Paola A. Gehrig

The results suggest that there may be a role for mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitors in the conservative management of endometrial cancer. This approach also raises the possibility that biomarkers may be able to identify the endometrial cancer patients who could potentially get the most benefit from a regimen that combines an mammalian target of rapamycin and an aromatase inhibitor.

Paola A. Gehrig, MD , is professor of ob.gyn. and director of gynecologic oncology at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. She made these comments as designated discussant for the study. She had no disclosures.


 

REPORTING FROM SGO 2018

– Combined treatment for 28 days with the mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor everolimus plus the aromatase inhibitor letrozole in 37 women with recurrent endometrial cancer produced an overall objective response rate of 24% and an average progression-free survival rate of 6.3 months in a randomized phase 2 study with a total of 74 patients. The treatment was also relatively well tolerated, with more serious adverse vents of anemia and hyperglycemia.

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But the most attention-grabbing finding of this study was that, in the subset of 15 women who had received no prior chemotherapy, the objective response rate on this regimen was 53% and median progression-free survival was 21.6 months, Brian M. Slomovitz, MD, said at the annual meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Oncology.

This level of response in the chemotherapy-naive subgroup was “very high, and not what we expected,” Dr. Slomovitz, , professor of ob.gyn. and human genetics and director of gynecologic oncology at the University of Miami, said in a video interview. “This is something we need to further investigate to see if we can make this part of standard care.”

Although he conceded that the data from this study were too limited to warrant a regulatory indication, he suggested that it might be enough to gain the everolimus plus letrozole combination used in the study citation as a treatment option in clinical guidelines. The next step should be a phase 3 trial that compares the everolimus plus letrozole combination with the traditional chemotherapy regimen of carboplatin plus paclitaxel, Dr. Slomovitz added.

The Everolimus and Letrozole or Hormonal Therapy to Treat Endometrial Cancer phase 2 trial, initiated by the Gynecologic Oncology Group, ran at 26 U.S. centers, and randomized patients with stage III or IV recurrent, advanced, or persistent endometrial cancer who had either no or at most one prior course of chemotherapy. The study design also excluded patients who had previously been treated with an mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor or hormonal therapy for their endometrial cancer. The control arm placed 37 patients on a standard hormonal therapy regimen of tamoxifen plus medroxyprogesterone, with 36 of patients in this subgroup evaluable.

The overall results in the two treatment arms were roughly similar, except for the striking benefit seen with everolimus(Afinitor) plus letrozole(Femara) in the chemotherapy-naive patents; 15 patients in each arm had not received any chemotherapy before entering the study. In this subgroup, among the patients who received conventional hormonal therapy, the objective response rate was 43% and progression-free survival was 6.6 months.

The two arms also differed by their pattern of grade 3 or 4 adverse events. Among the patients on everolimus plus letrozole, the most common were anemia (24%) and hyperglycemia (14%), both expected consequences of the regimen. The hormonal therapy arm led to an 8% incidence of thromboembolic events, which did not occur in the everolimus plus letrozole arm.

Another attraction of the everolimus and letrozole regimen is that it is oral and avoids the need for drug infusions, Dr. Slomovitz noted.

The investigator-initiated study received funding from Novartis, the company that markets everolimus and letrozole. Dr. Slomovitz has been an advisor to Advaxis, AstraZeneca, Clovis, Genmab, Jannsen, and Tesaro, and he has received research funding from Novartis.

SOURCE: Slomovitz BM et al. SGO 2018, abstract 1.

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