| Literature DB >> 26373569 |
Jonathan R Strosberg1, James C Yao2, Emilio Bajetta2, Mounir Aout2, Bert Bakker2, John D Hainsworth2, Philippe B Ruszniewski2, Eric Van Cutsem2, Kjell Öberg2, Marianne E Pavel2.
Abstract
Somatostatin analogues (SSA) have demonstrated antiproliferative activity in addition to efficacy for carcinoid symptom control in functional neuroendocrine tumors (NET). A post hoc analysis of the placebo arm of the RAD001 In Advanced Neuroendocrine Tumors-2 (RADIANT-2) study was conducted to assess the efficacy of octreotide long-acting repeatable (LAR) on progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Out of 213 patients randomized to placebo plus octreotide LAR in RADIANT-2, 196 patients with foregut, midgut, or hindgut NET were considered for present analysis. Of these, 41 patients were SSA-treatment naïve and 155 had received SSA therapy before study entry. For SSA-naïve patients, median PFS by adjudicated central review was 13.6 (95% CI 8.2-22.7) months. For SSA-naïve patients with midgut NET (n=24), median PFS was 22.2 (95% CI 8.3-29.5) months. For patients who had received SSA previously, the median PFS was 11.1 (95% CI 8.4-14.3) months. Among the SSA-pretreated patients who had midgut NET (n=119), the median PFS was 12.0 (95% CI 8.4-19.3) months. Median OS was 35.8 (95% CI 32.5-48.9) months for patients in the placebo plus octreotide LAR arm; 50.6 (36.4 - not reached) months for SSA-naïve patients and 33.5 (95% CI 27.5-44.7) months for those who had received prior SSA. This post hoc analysis of the placebo arm of the large phase 3 RADIANT-2 study provides data on PFS and OS among patients with progressive NET treated with octreotide therapy.Entities:
Keywords: neuroendocrine tumors; octreotide LAR; progression-free survival; somatostatin analogues
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26373569 PMCID: PMC4609826 DOI: 10.1530/ERC-15-0314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocr Relat Cancer ISSN: 1351-0088 Impact factor: 5.678
Figure 1RADIANT-2 study design and the focus of the present post hoc analysis. LAR, long-acting repeatable; q28d, every 28 days; SSA, somatostatin analogues. *A total of 196 patients (41 SSA-naïve and 155 who had received SSA previously) had foregut, midgut, or hindgut NET and were included in the present analysis.
Baseline demographics and clinical characteristics (stratified by previous SSA use)
| Median age (range), years | 59 (37–75) | 60 (27–81) | 60 (27–81) |
| Sex, | |||
| Male | 22 (54) | 92 (59) | 114 (58) |
| Female | 19 (46) | 63 (41) | 82 (42) |
| WHO PS, | |||
| 0 | 30 (73) | 100 (65) | 130 (66) |
| 1 | 11 (27) | 45 (29) | 56 (29) |
| 2 | 0 | 10 (6) | 10 (5) |
| Tumor location, | |||
| Foregut | 15 (37) | 17 (11) | 32 (16) |
| Midgut | 24 (59) | 119 (77) | 143 (73) |
| Hindgut | 2 (5) | 19 (12) | 21 (11) |
| Histology, | |||
| Well differentiated or low-grade | 32 (78) | 128 (83) | 160 (82) |
| Moderately differentiated or intermediate-grade | 9 (22) | 20 (13) | 29 (15) |
| Poorly differentiated or high-grade | 0 | 1 (<1) | 1 (<1) |
| Unknown | 0 | 6 (4) | 6 (3) |
| Time since initial diagnosis, | |||
| ≤6 months | 10 (24) | 11 (7) | 21 (11) |
| >6 months–≤2 years | 9 (22) | 37 (24) | 46 (23) |
| >2–≤5 years | 14 (34) | 35 (23) | 49 (25) |
| >5–≤10 years | 6 (15) | 51 (33) | 57 (29) |
| >10 years | 2 (5) | 20 (13) | 22 (11) |
| Systemic antitumor drugs, | |||
| Chemotherapy | 11 (27) | 43 (28) | 54 (28) |
| Immunotherapy | 1 (2) | 18 (12) | 19 (10) |
| Targeted therapy | 1 (2) | 13 (8) | 14 (7) |
| Other | 1 (2) | 25 (16) | 26 (13) |
| Previous SSA therapy, | |||
| Octreotide LAR | – | 142 (92) | 142 (72) |
| Lanreotide | – | 13 (8) | 13 (7) |
WHO PS, World Health Organization performance status; SSA, somatostatin analogues; LAR, long-acting repeatable.
Data missing for one patient.
Tumors originating in the lung, stomach, duodenum, or pancreas were categorized as foregut NET; those originating in the small intestine, appendix, proximal colon, or of unknown primary sites were considered to be midgut NET; and those with the colon (transverse or distal) or rectum as the primary site were classified as hindgut NET.
The histology-based categories as reported in pathology reports. At the time of study conduct, the harmonized definition of grading for NET was not established and the WHO classification was not in practice. Thus, the categories reported here may not translate in to strict numerical categories based on WHO grading (based on mitotic count and/or Ki-67 labeling index) being used in current clinical practice.
Data missing for two patients.
Total is not 100%, as 41 (21%) patients did not receive prior SSA therapy.
Figure 2Kaplan–Meier plots of progression-free events in patients with midgut tumors. (A) By adjudicated central review. (B) By local assessment. SSA, somatostatin analogues.
OS (data cutoff date, 13 June 2013)
| Median OS, months (95% CI) | Median OS, months (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 41 (100) | 50.6 (36.4–NR) | 155 (100) | 33.5 (27.5–44.7) |
| By tumor location | ||||
| Foregut | 15 (37) | 36.4 (25.5–NR) | 17 (11) | 33.6 (16.7–NR) |
| Midgut | 24 (59) | NR (42.4–NR) | 119 (77) | 33.5 (27.5–49.4) |
| Hindgut | 2 (5) | NR (4.7–NR) | 19 (12) | 35.8 (15.4–48.9) |
SSA, somatostatin analogues; OS, overall survival; NR, not reached.
Includes patients who had received previous octreotide or lanreotide treatment.