| Literature DB >> 29558389 |
Klaus Rose1, Jane M Grant-Kels2.
Abstract
Importance-Pediatric melanoma occurs, albeit rarely. Should patients be treated by today's medical standards, or be subjected to medically unnecessary clinical studies? Observations-We identified international, industry-sponsored pediatric melanoma studies triggered by regulatory demands in www.clinicaltrials.gov and further pediatric melanoma studies demanded by European Union pediatric investigation plans. We retrieved related regulatory documents from the internet. We analyzed these studies for rationale and medical beneficence on the basis of physiology, pediatric clinical pharmacology and rationale. Regulatory authorities define children by chronological age, not physiologically. Newborns' organs are immature but they develop and mature rapidly. Separate proof of efficacy in underage patients is justified formally/regulatorily but lacks medical sense. Children-especially post-puberty-and adults vis-a-vis medications are physiologically very similar. Two adolescent melanoma studies were terminated in 2016 because of waning recruitment, while five studies in pediatric melanoma and other solid tumors, triggered by European Union pediatric investigation plans, continue recruiting worldwide. Conclusions and Relevance-Regulatory-demanded pediatric melanoma studies are medically superfluous. Melanoma patients of all ages should be treated with effective combination treatment. Babies need special attention. Children need dose-finding and pharmacokinetic studies but adolescents metabolize and respond to drugs similarly to adults. Institutional Review Boards/ethics committees should suspend ongoing questionable pediatric melanoma studies and reject newly submitted questionable studies.Entities:
Keywords: EU pediatric regulation; Pediatric Investigation Plan (PIP); developmental pharmacology; pediatric clinical pharmacology; pediatric clinical studies; pediatric drug development; pediatric laws; pediatric pharmaceutical legislation
Year: 2018 PMID: 29558389 PMCID: PMC5867502 DOI: 10.3390/children5030043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
European Medicines Agency (EMA) melanoma Pediatric Investigation Plans (PIPs).
| Compound | PIP Number |
|---|---|
| Binimetinib | EMEA-001454-PIP03-15 |
| Cobimetinib | EMEA-001425-PIP01-13-M01 |
| Dabrafenib | EMEA–001147-PIP01-11-M03 |
| Encorafenib | EMEA-001588-PIP01-13 |
| Ipilimumab * | EMEA-000117-PIP02-10 [ |
| MAGE-A3 recombinant protein ** | EMEA-001099-PIP02-11 [ |
| Nivolumab | EMEA-001407-PIP01-12 |
| Paclitaxel | EMEA-001308-PIP01-12 |
| Pembrolizumab | EMEA-001474-PIP01-13 |
| Selumetinib | EMEA-001585-PIP01-13 |
| Talimogene laherparapvec | EMEA-001251-PIP01-11-M03 |
| Trametinib | EMEA-001177-PIP01-11-M02 |
| Vemurafenib ** | EMEA-000978-PIP01-10 [ |
* The first ipilimumab melanoma PIP, EMEA-000117-PIP02-10 is retrievable through the EMA document library [31]. Its current version M07 (7th modification) can be retrieved through Google. ** PIPs later changed into waivers (no pediatric studies required). Original PIPs can be retrieved by the EMA document library, the respective link is referenced; current PIP versions can be googled by its respective number.
First two ipilimumab Written Requested (WR) clinical studies.
An open label, dose-escalation study of ipilimumab in pediatric patients (aged 1–21 years) with refractory cancers. A clinical study of ipilimumab in pediatric patients (12–<18 years) with unresectable or metastatic melanoma to evaluate PK and safety.
Efficacy in adolescent patients (12–<18 years) will be determined by extrapolation from results observed in adult patients treated with ipilimumab for unresectable or metastatic melanoma. |
Terminated industry-sponsored international studies in adolescents with melanoma.
| Study # | Abbreviated Study Description | Centers | Sponsor | Pts | Age (y) | PIP/WR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01519323 | Vemurafenib in Stage IIIC/IV Melanoma with BRAFV600 Mutations | 26 | Roche | 6 | 12–17 | EMEA-000978-PIP01-10 [ |
| EMEA-000978-PIP01-10-M01 | ||||||
| NCT01696045 | Ipilimumab in untreated or previously treated advanced or metastatic melanoma. | 32 | BMS | 12 | 12–17 | EMEA-000117-PIP02-10 (Original) [ |
| EMEA-000117-PIP02-10-M07 (current) WR [ |
Abbreviations: Pts—patients; Roche—Hoffman-La Roche; BMS—Bristol-Myers Squibb; y—years.
Ongoing industry-sponsored pediatric studies including patients with melanoma.
| Study # | Abbreviated Study Description | Centers | Age | Pts | Sponsor | PIP # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02332668 | Pembrulizumab in advanced melanoma or advanced R/R PDL1–positive solid tumors or lymphoma | 45 | 6-month–17 y | 310 | MSD | EMEA-001474-PIP01-13 |
| NCT01677741 | Dabrafenib in advanced BRAF V600 mutation–positive solid tumors | 27 | 1–17 y | 86 | GSK | EMEA–001147-PIP01-11-M03 |
| NCT01962103 | Paclitaxel DF & PE in R/R solid tumors | 20 | 6-month–17 y Ph1 | 107 | Celgene | EMEA-001308-PIP01-12 |
| 2–24 y Ph2 | ||||||
| EUdraCT 2014-004685-25 | Cobimetinib DE, S & PK in previously treated solid tumors | 41 | 1–17 y (DES) | 50 | Roche | EMEA-001425-PIP01-13-M01 |
| 6–30 y (ES) | ||||||
| NCT02756845 | S&E of talimogene laherparepvec in melanoma and advanced non-CNS tumors | 17 | 12–21 y Ph1 | 18 | Amgen | EMEA-001251-PIP01-11-M03 |
| 2–11 y Ph2 |
Abbreviations in alphabetic order: CNS—central nervous system; DE—dose escalation; DES—dose escalation study; DF—dose finding; ES—expansion study; GSK—GlaxoSmithKline; MSD—Merck, Sharp & Dome; PE—preliminary; Ph1—phase 1; Ph2—phase 2; PK—pharmacokinetics efficacy; Pts—Patients; Roche—Hoffman-La Roche; R/R—recurrent or refractory; S—safety; y—years.
Study centers of terminated and ongoing “pediatric” melanoma studies.
| Study # | Compound | Study Centers |
|---|---|---|
| NCT01519323 | US: Los Angeles (CA), Aurora (CO), St. Peterburgh (FL), Bethesda (MD), Boston (MA), New York (NY), Memphis (TN), Houston (TX) • Australia: Westmead, Brisbane • France: Marseille, Pierre Benite • Germany: Kiel, Mainz, Tuebingen • Israel: Jerusalem, Petach-Tikva • Italy: Roma, Genova, Milano • Poland: Wroclaw • Slovakia: Bratislava • Spain: Esplugues De Llobregat-Barceona, Sevilla • UK: Newcastle, Sutton | |
| NCT01696045 | US: Phoenix (AZ), Los Angeles (CA), Orange (CA), Aurora (CO), Tampa (FL), Indianapolis (IN), Boston (MA), Rochester (MN), New York (NY), Pittsburg (PA), Memphis (TN), Houston (TX), 2 × Salt Lake City (UT) • Belgium: Gent • Denmark: Copenhagen • France: Lyon, Marseille, Nantes, Villejuif Cedex • Germany: Dortmund, Erlangen, Hamburg, 2 × Muenster • Mexico: 2 × Mexico DF, Leon • Spain: Esplugues de Llobregat-Barcelona • UK: Bristol, Newcastle, Sutton | |
| NCT02332668 | US: Phoenix (AZ), Loma Linda (CA), 2 × Los Angeles (CA), Madera (CA), Orange (CA), San Diego (CA), San Francisco (CA), Aurora (CO), New Haven (CT), Washington DC, Atlanta (GA), Indianapolis (IN), Iowa City (IA), Boston (MA), Ann Arbor (MI), 2 × Minneapolis (MN), Cansas City (MO), Sant Louis (MO), New York (NY), Cincinatti (OH), Cleveland (OH), Columbus (OH), Philadelphia (PA), Pittsburg (PA), Memphis (TN), Nashville (TN), Dallas (TX), Fort Worth (TX), Houston (TX), Salt Lake City (UT), Seattle (WA), Milwaukee (WI) • Australia: North Ride • Brazil: Sao Paulo • Canada: Kirkland • France: Paris • Germany: Haar • Israel: Hod Hasharon • Italy: Rome • Korea: Seoul • New Zealnd: Wellinton • Sweden: Stockholm • UK: Hoddesdon | |
| NCT01677741 | US: Phoenix (AZ), Orange (CA), Baltimore (MD), Boston (MA), New York (NY), Cincinatti (OH), Memphis (TN), Seattle (WA) • Australia: Parville, Subiaco • Canada: Toronto • Denmark: Copenhagen • France: Marseille, Paris cedex 05, Paris cedex 12, Toulouse, Villejuif cedex • Germany: Heidelberg, Regensburg, Berlin • Israel: Jerusalem, Ramat-Gan • Italy: Milano • Spain: Esplugues de Llobregat-Barcelona, Madrid • UK: Sutton, London | |
| NCT01962103 | US: Phoenix (AZ), New York (NY) • Canada: Ontario • France: Lyon, Nancy, Paris, Villejuif • Italy: Firenze, Genova, Milano, Padvoa, Rome, Torino • Spain: 2 × Barcelona, Madrid, Sevilla, Valencia • Switzerland: Zuerich • UK: Sutton | |
| EUdraCT 2014-004685-25 * | Netherlands • Ireland • Denmark • UK • Germany • Spain | |
| NCT02756845 | US: Wilmington (DE), Chicago (IL), Indianapolis (IN), Detroit (MI), NY (NY), Cincinatti (OH), Columbus (OH) • Canada: Montreal • France: Lyon, Marseille, Paris • Spain: Barcelona, Esplugues de Llobregat, Valenica, Madrid • Switzerland: Basel, Zuerich |
Explanations: Abbreviations for US states by two-letter codes of the US Postal Service. * www.clinicaltrialsregister.eu (EUdraCT) only lists countries, not individual study centers.