| Literature DB >> 26824502 |
Sariah Liu1, Mina Nikanjam2, Razelle Kurzrock3.
Abstract
Metastatic cancers harbor complex genomic alterations. Thus, monotherapies are often suboptimal. Individualized combinations are needed in order to attenuate resistance. To help inform selection of safe starting doses for novel, two-agent, targeted drug combinations, we identified clinical trials in adult oncology patients who received targeted drug doublets (PubMed, January 1, 2010 through December 31, 2013). The dose percentage was calculated for each drug: (safe dose in combination divided by single agent full dose) X 100. Additive dose percentage represented the sum of the dose percentage for each drug. A total of 144 studies (N = 8568 patients; 95 combinations) were analyzed. In 51% of trials, each of the two drugs could be administered at 100% of their full dose. The lowest safe additive dose percentage was 60% if targets and/or class of drugs overlapped, or in the presence of mTor inhibitors, which sometimes compromised the combination dose. If neither class nor target overlapped and if mTor inhibitors were absent, the lowest safe additive dose percentage was 143%. The current observations contribute to the knowledge base that informs safe starting doses for new combinations of targeted drugs in the context of clinical trials or practice, hence facilitating customized combination therapies.Entities:
Keywords: maximum tolerated dose; oncology; precision medicine; recommended phase 2 dose; targeted therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26824502 PMCID: PMC4905475 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.7023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Two targeted drug combinations reported over four years (Phase I, II, III studies on PubMed January 1, 2010 to December 21, 2013)
| Two targeted agents | |
|---|---|
| Number of trials | 144 |
| Number of drug combinations | 95 |
| Number of patients | 8568 |
| Median (range) additive dose percentage | 200% (60%-200%) |
| Number (percent) of trials where ≥ one drug dose percentage was 100% | 121 (84%) |
| Number of drug combinations where ≥ one drug dose percentage was 100% | 78 |
| Number of patients where ≥ one drug dose percentage was 100% | 7748 |
| Median (range) percentile for second drug when one drug dose percentage was 100% | 100% (25%-100%) |
| Number (percent) of trials where each drug's dose percentage was 100% (e.g. additive dose percentage | 74 (51%) |
| Number of drug combinations where each drug's dose percentage was 100% (e.g. additive dose percentage = 200%) | 48 |
| Number of patients where each drug's dose percentage was 100% (e.g. additive dose percentage = 200%) | 5229 |
| Number (percent) of trials where additive dose percentage was >100%, with no single drug given at 100% | 13 (9%) |
| In trials where additive dose percentage was >100%, with no single drug given at 100%, median (range) of additive dose percentage | 127% (104%-148%) |
| Number (percent) of trials where additive dose percentage was ≤100% and safe dose was found | 5 (4%) |
| In trials where additive dose percentage was ≤100% and safe dose was found, median (range) of additive dose percentage | 75% (60%-100%) |
| Number (percent) of trials where additive dose percentage was ≤100% and safe dose was not found | 3 (2%) |
| In trials where additive dose percentage was ≤100% and safe dose was not found, median (range) of additive dose percentage studied | 75% (65%-100%) |
| Number (percent) of trials that were aborted early with additive dose percentage >100% | 2 (1%) |
| In trials that were aborted early with additive dose percentage >100%, median (range) of additive dose percentage | 200% |
Excludes hormonal modulators and immunotherapy
Additive dose percentage = (dose of drug A in combination/standard dose of drug A as a single agent) X 100 + (dose of drug B in combination/standard dose of drug B as a single agent) X 100.
See Results for details. In the case of two trials in which safe dose could not be defined, other trials of the same combination did define a safe dose (additive dose percentage = 100% or 75%); one trial had fatigue as a dose-limiting toxicity, but no acute or irreversible toxicities.
Summary of Two Targeted Drugs in Combination
| Second drug at 100% dose percentage of FDA-approved dose/RP2D/MTD | Lowest safe dose percentage of second drug if both are of the same class and/or have overlapping targets | Lowest additive dose percentage of the combination | |
|---|---|---|---|
| First drug at 100% dose percentage of FDA-approved dose/RP2D/MTD | 61% of trials(74/121)(Note: 74 of the 144 total trials (51%) administered each drug at 100% dose) | 25% of FDA/RP2D/MTD | 125% |
| First drug at 51-99% dose percentage of the FDA-approved dose/RP2D/MTD | Not applicable(13 total trials) | 29% of FDA/RP2D/MTD | 104% |
| First drug at ≤ 50% dose percentage of the FDA-approved dose/RP2D/MTD | Not applicable(5 total trials) | 10% of FDA/RP2D/MTD | 60% (overlapping targets in each case) |
The five studies where no safe dose was found or study was aborted early due to unacceptable toxicity were excluded from this table and include: bevacizumab and sorafenib [28, 29], pazopanib and temsirolimus [27], bevacizumab and everolimus [31], and bevacizumab and temsirolimus [32]
First drug had the dose percentage closest to the FDA-approved/RP2D/MTD dose
In these cases, the combinations were same class (small molecule inhibitors) with non-overlapping targets (sorafenib at 100% with everolimus at 25%, and imatinib at 100% with everolimus at 25%) [12–14].
Sunitinib was at 75% and everolimus at 29% [20]
Rapamycin was at 93% and bevacizumab was at 50% [19]
Bevacizumab with vatalinib [26] and bevacizumab with telatinib [25] each included an anti-VEGF antibody and a small molecule VEGFR inhibitor (both at 10% and 50%, respectively)
Sorafenib was at 50% and temsirolimus at 40% [23]; however the combination of pazopanib and temsirolimus was above the FDA-approved/RP2D/MTD at an additive dose percentage of 65% (albeit with no acute or irreversible side effects and with the nonspecific side effect of fatigue as dose limiting in one patient).
Abbreviations: MTD = maximum tolerated dose; RP2D = recommended phase II dose
Summary of Subset Analysis for Combination of Two Small Molecule Inhibitors, as well as Small Molecule Inhibitor and Antibody Combinations
| Second drug at 100% dose percentage of FDA-approved dose/RP2D/MTD | Lowest additive dose percentage of the combination | |
| First drug at 100% dose percentage of FDA-approved dose/RP2D/MTD | 44% of trials(25/57)(Note: 25 of the 68 total trials (37%) administered each drug at 100% dose) | 125% |
| First drug at 51-99% dose percentage of the FDA-approved dose/RP2D/MTD | Not applicable(9 total trials) | 104% |
| First drug at ≤ 50% dose percentage of the FDA-approved dose/RP2D/MTD | Not applicable(2 total trials) | 90% |
| First drug at 100% dose percentage of FDA-approved dose/RP2D/MTD | 73% of trials(40/55)(Note: 40 of the 62 total trials (65%) administered each drug at 100% dose) | 150% |
| First drug at 51-99% dose percentage of the FDA-approved dose/RP2D/MTD | Not applicable(4 total trials) | 117% |
| First drug at ≤ 50% dose percentage of the FDA-approved dose/RP2D/MTD | Not applicable(3 total trials) | 60% (overlapping targets in each case) |
All combinations of two antibodies had each drug given at 100% of the FDA-approved/RP2D/MTD dose
In these cases, the combinations had non-overlapping targets (sorafenib at 100% with everolimus at 25%, and imatinib at 100% with everolimus at 25%) [12–14].
Sunitinib was at 75% and everolimus at 29% [20]
Sorafenib was at 50% and temsirolimus at 40% [23].
Bevacizumab and erlotinib were each given at 50% and 100%, respectively [15–17] while panobinostat and bevacizumab were given at 50% and 100%, respectively [18].
Vandetanib was at 67% and bevacizumab was at 50% [21].
Rapamycin was at 93% and bevacizumab was at 50% [19].
Bevacizumab with vatalinib [26] and bevacizumab with telatinib [25] each included an anti-VEGF antibody and a small molecule VEGFR inhibitor (both at 10% and 50%, respectively).