| Literature DB >> 25712686 |
Angela DeMichele1, Douglas Yee2, Donald A Berry3, Kathy S Albain4, Christopher C Benz5, Judy Boughey6, Meredith Buxton7, Stephen K Chia8, Amy J Chien7, Stephen Y Chui9, Amy Clark1, Kirsten Edmiston10, Anthony D Elias11, Andres Forero-Torres12, Tufia C Haddad6, Barbara Haley13, Paul Haluska6, Nola M Hylton7, Claudine Isaacs14, Henry Kaplan15, Larissa Korde16, Brian Leyland-Jones17, Minetta C Liu6, Michelle Melisko7, Susan E Minton18, Stacy L Moulder3, Rita Nanda19, Olufunmilayo I Olopade19, Melissa Paoloni20, John W Park7, Barbara A Parker21, Jane Perlmutter22, Emanuel F Petricoin23, Hope Rugo7, Fraser Symmans3, Debasish Tripathy24, Laura J van't Veer7, Rebecca K Viscusi25, Anne Wallace21, Denise Wolf7, Christina Yau5, Laura J Esserman26.
Abstract
The many improvements in breast cancer therapy in recent years have so lowered rates of recurrence that it is now difficult or impossible to conduct adequately powered adjuvant clinical trials. Given the many new drugs and potential synergistic combinations, the neoadjuvant approach has been used to test benefit of drug combinations in clinical trials of primary breast cancer. A recent FDA-led meta-analysis showed that pathologic complete response (pCR) predicts disease-free survival (DFS) within patients who have specific breast cancer subtypes. This meta-analysis motivated the FDA's draft guidance for using pCR as a surrogate endpoint in accelerated drug approval. Using pCR as a registration endpoint was challenged at ASCO 2014 Annual Meeting with the presentation of ALTTO, an adjuvant trial in HER2-positive breast cancer that showed a nonsignificant reduction in DFS hazard rate for adding lapatinib, a HER-family tyrosine kinase inhibitor, to trastuzumab and chemotherapy. This conclusion seemed to be inconsistent with the results of NeoALTTO, a neoadjuvant trial that found a statistical improvement in pCR rate for the identical lapatinib-containing regimen. We address differences in the two trials that may account for discordant conclusions. However, we use the FDA meta-analysis to show that there is no discordance at all between the observed pCR difference in NeoALTTO and the observed HR in ALTTO. This underscores the importance of appropriately modeling the two endpoints when designing clinical trials. The I-SPY 2/3 neoadjuvant trials exemplify this approach. ©2015 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25712686 PMCID: PMC4490043 DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-14-1760
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 1078-0432 Impact factor: 12.531