Literature DB >> 32218807

An open label, multicenter, noninterventional study of apatinib in advanced gastric cancer patients (AHEAD-G202).

Xiang Wang1, Ruixing Zhang2, Nan Du3, Mudan Yang4, Aimin Zang5, Likun Liu6, Junyan Yu7, Jinghua Gao8, Junping Zhang9, Zhanzhao Fu10, Yuchuan Ren11, Liwen Ma12, Jun Guo13, Qingshan Li14, Xiaomei Li15, Zaiwen Fan16, Xiang Song17, Zheng Liu18, Yan Zhang19, Guozhong Li20, Zhonghe Yu21, Jianfeng Diao22, Junmei Jia23, Feng Liang24, Huaqing Wang25, Junzhong Sun3, Yunge Gao26, Ping Yang27, Chunmei Bai28, Xiubao Ren29, Diansheng Zhong30.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Apatinib has been proved to be effective and well tolerated among patients in phase II and III studies. Here, we evaluated the safety and effectiveness of apatinib in advanced gastric cancer patients in a real-world setting.
METHODS: This study enrolled advanced gastric cancer patients who had progressed or relapsed despite systemic chemotherapy. The primary outcome was safety and the secondary outcomes included overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS).
RESULTS: A total of 337 patients were included. In total, 62 (18.4%), 102 (30.3%), and 173 (51.3%) patients received first, second, and third or higher line apatinib therapy, respectively. Grade 3/4 treatment-emergent adverse events (AEs) were infrequent (<5%), with hypertension (6.8%) being the only grade 3/4 AE occurring in more than 5% of the patients and across the low-dose (250 mg, 7.3%), mid-dose (425-500 mg, 6.1%), and high-dose group (675-850 mg, 2/15, 13.3%). The median OS and PFS were 7.13 months (95% CI, 6.17-7.93) and 4.20 months (95% CI, 4.60-4.77), respectively, and were comparable among the low-, mid-, and high-dose groups.
CONCLUSION: Lower daily doses of apatinib achieved comparable OS and PFS versus higher daily doses of apatinib while maintaining a more benign safety profile in advanced gastric cancer patients. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02668380.
© The Author(s), 2020.

Entities:  

Keywords:  apatinib; effectiveness; gastric cancer; real world; safety

Year:  2020        PMID: 32218807      PMCID: PMC7082876          DOI: 10.1177/1758835920905424

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ther Adv Med Oncol        ISSN: 1758-8340            Impact factor:   8.168


Introduction

Gastric cancer is one of the most frequent malignancies and currently the third leading cause of cancer-related mortality globally with approximately 723,000 deaths annually.[1,2] Despite the recent decline in the prevalence of gastric cancer in China, 498,000 gastric cancer deaths were estimated to have occurred in 2015 in the country,[3] with a mortality of 15.6 per 100,000.[4] Gastric cancer is often diagnosed at an advanced stage (locally advanced or metastatic) when it is not amenable to curative surgical resection and palliative chemotherapy remains the principal therapeutic modality.[5] The outcome of advanced gastric cancer is rather dismal with an overall survival (OS) less than 12 months.[6] For advanced gastric cancer patients with a good performance status, chemotherapy is the standard first-line therapeutic option. A combination of a fluoropyrimidine (e.g. 5-fluorouracil, capecitabine, or S-1), a platinum agent (e.g. cisplatin, or oxaliplatin), and a taxane (e.g. docetaxel) are usually recommended in patients with human epidermal growth factor 2 (HER-2) negative tumors;[7-9] patients who have HER-2 positive tumors should also receive trastuzumab.[10] For further improvement of treatment outcomes, second-line chemotherapy is administered routinely.[7-9] Treatment options include docetaxel, paclitaxel, or irinotecan monotherapy,[11-14] or the antivascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 antibody ramucirumab alone or in combination with paclitaxel.[15,16] However, nearly all patients with advanced disease continue to have disease progression following treatment. At present, new approaches are focusing on molecularly driven therapies and immunotherapy. Apatinib, which was approved in 2014 by the China Food and Drug Administration (CFDA) for treating advanced gastric or gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma patients who failed second-line chemotherapy,[17,18] is an oral tyrosine kinase inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2.[19] The drug has demonstrated antitumor activity in some solid tumors.[20] The phase III trial has shown that apatinib at the dose level of 850 mg once daily significantly improves the prognosis of advanced gastric cancer patients who have previously failed second-line chemotherapy, modestly extending progression-free survival (PFS) by 1 month and OS by 2 months.[17] However, lingering questions still remain regarding the safety of apatinib in the phase III trial;[21] 8.5% of the patients had grade 3/4 hand–foot syndrome and 5.7% had grade 3/4 neutropenia. In addition, the median age of the study population was 58 years and a smaller proportion of the study population were aged between 65 and 70 years, which is lower than the age of patients seen in the real-world setting. Furthermore, 40 patients in the phase III trial discontinued apatinib treatment, 22 (55%) of them owing to toxicity. The goals of second-line and subsequent lines of treatment in advanced gastric cancer are to increase residual survival and gain symptomatic control, while minimizing toxicities.[13,22,23] Our current experience is limited with the use of apatinib for advanced gastric cancer and is based mostly on data from clinical trials in which the patient population is tightly controlled and homogeneous and a higher dose of apatinib (850 mg once daily) is used.[17,24-26] Only a small real-world study is available on the effectiveness and safety of apatinib in 36 patients with advanced gastric adenocarcinoma or adenocarcinoma of the gastroesophageal junction.[27] Therefore, as the first tyrosine kinase inhibitor approved in advanced gastric cancer, it is necessary to evaluate the treatment of apatinib more accurately in the real-world setting. In this noninterventional study, we investigated the safety and effectiveness of apatinib in 337 advanced gastric cancer patients in a real-world setting.

Methods

Patients

This noninterventional, real-world study was conducted across 29 centers in China between September 2015 and March 2018. We enrolled adult (⩾18 years old) patients with pathologically proven advanced gastric cancer. Patients with known allergy to apatinib, pregnant or lactating women, and patients with active bleeding, ulcers, intestinal perforation or obstruction within 30 days after major surgery, uncontrolled hypertension, NY functional class III–IV cardiac insufficiency, or severe liver and kidney dysfunction were excluded. The study protocol received a centralized review at the institutional review board of the leader institution, who also served as the reviewing board for the participating sites, and was approved by the institutional review board of the leader institution. All participating sites obtained institutional review board or ethics committee approval of the study protocol prior to local initiation of the study. The study was performed in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and Good Clinical Practice and according to the relevant laws and guidelines in China (Supplementary List I). Written informed consent to participation in the study was obtained from each patient before the start of the study. The diagnostic and therapeutic practices were implemented according to the clinical practice of each participating center. The trial is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02668380).

Treatment

Any dosing schedule and dose modification of apatinib were part of routine clinical practice. Apatinib was given orally at 850 mg once daily. One cycle of treatment consisted of 28 days. The dose was modified at the discretion of attending oncologists to 250–850 mg once daily during the course of the study following recommendation by the drug manufacturer (Jiangsu Hengrui Medicine) and an expert consensus[28] based on feedback of treatment-emergent adverse events (AEs). The modification was approved by the appropriate ethics committee and updated in the protocol. Patients received apatinib until disease progression, unacceptable toxicities or at the physician’s discretion. Dose interruptions or reductions were done to manage toxicities following the starting dose. Dose was increased if deemed necessary. If apatinib was discontinued for any reason, the date of the last dosage and the primary reason for discontinuation were documented, and the patient was withdrawn from the study.

Patient evaluation

We collected information on patient demographic and baseline characteristics including American Joint Committee on Cancer stage, Lauren classification and Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status (ECOG-PS) score, treatment patterns by line of therapy, patient outcomes, and safety data. AEs were collected and coded to a preferred term using the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities. AEs were reviewed and determined from the medical history and laboratory findings or from telephone follow up according to the National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 4.0. Safety analysis included all patients who received at least one dose of the study drug and had at least one follow-up safety assessment. The intention-to-treat (ITT) population included all patients who received at least one dose of the study drug, had a baseline assessment, and at least one postbaseline assessment. Evaluation of treatment response and progression was based on physician’s assessment; response evaluation criteria in solid tumors (RECIST v1.1) evaluation was performed but not mandatory. In accordance with routine practice, clinical assessment of response to treatment and evaluation by computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging were undertaken during regular visits at an interval of approximately 8–12 weeks.

Statistical analysis

Scientific conduct and safety reviews were supervised by a trained team of supervisors to assure adherence to the study protocol by each participating center and accuracy and integrity of trial data. The statistical analyses were prespecified before the database lock and followed the ITT principle. All analyses were descriptive and performed using SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA). No sample size calculation was required given that this was a registry study and the final total number of patients enrolled was the size of the study population. Both responses and AEs were aggregated in the form of frequency counts and percentages. The primary outcome of this study was safety and included treatment and apatinib alone-emergent AEs. The secondary outcomes included OS, PFS, objective response rate (ORR), and disease control rate (DCR). The ORR included complete response (CR) and partial response (PR) that were assessed using the RECIST v 1.1. DCR was the percentage of patients with stable disease (SD), CR, or PR. OS and PFS and their corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were evaluated using Kaplan–Meier method and measured from the date of apatinib initiation to the time of progression by physician assessment or death of any cause. Patients surviving or progressing at the time of data collection were censored at the date of last contact for OS and PFS, respectively. Date of the last contact was used for OS and date of last evaluable follow up was used for PFS of patients who dropped out of the study or were lost to follow up. The ORR and DCR were analyzed on the basis of frequency counts. All statistical analyses were two sided. The statistical significance cutoff of p = 0.05 was used to retain the variables in the final model.

Results

Patient demographic, baseline, and treatment characteristics

The study flowchart is shown in Figure 1. Patient demographic and baseline characteristics are shown in Table 1. A total of 337 advanced gastric cancer patients received apatinib therapy at 29 participating centers. Male patients accounted for 68.5% of the study population and 36.8% of the patients were aged at least 65 years. Moreover, 95.2% of them had stage IV gastric cancer. The ECOG-PS score was 0 or 1 in 61.4% and 2 or above in 21.7% of the patients.
Figure 1.

The study flowchart.

Table 1.

Patient demographic and baseline characteristics.

VariablesApatinib
χ2 p
All250 mg425–500 mg675–850 mg
N (%) 337124 (36.8)198 (58.7)15 (4.5)
Male gender, n (%) 231 (68.5)88 (70.2)135 (68.7)8 (53.3)1.76190.4144
Age, years, (%) 4.20050.1224
 ⩾65124 (36.8)54 (43.5)64 (32.3)6 (40.0)
AJCC staging, n (%) 3.11530.2106
 III16 (4.7)4 (3.2)12 (6.1)0 (0.0)
 IV321 (95.2)120 (96.8)186 (93.9)15 (100.0)
ECOG performance score, n (%) 0.0214[*]
 041 (1.2)8 (6.4)32 (16.2)1 (6.7)
 1203 (60.2)75 (60.5)120 (60.6)8 (53.3)
 >=273 (21.7)35 (28.2)34 (17.2)4 (26.7)
 N/A20 (5.9)6 (4.8)12 (6.1)2 (13.3)
Metastatic sites, n (%) 1.2290.5409
 >276 (22.5)31 (25.0)43 (21.7)2 (13.3)
Lauren classification, n (%) 0.6859[*]
 Intestinal59 (17.5)24 (19.4)33 (16.7)2 (40.0)
 Diffuse95 (28.2)29 (23.4)63 (31.8)3 (60.0)
 Mixed22 (6.5)8 (6.4)14 (7.1)0 (0.0)
 N/A161 (47.8)63 (50.8)88 (44.4)10 (66.7)
Prior radiotherapy, n (%) 3.22670.1992
 Yes59 (17.5)21 (16.9)36 (18.2)2 (13.3)
Prior surgery, n (%) 0.0485[*]
 Yes147 (43.6)59 (47.6)87 (43.9)1 (11.1)
 No159 (47.2)52 (41.9)99 (50.0)8 (53.3)
 N/A31 (9.2)13 (10.5)12 (6.1)6 (40.0)
Line of therapy, n (%) 0.0266[*]
 162 (18.4)13 (10.5)47 (23.7)2 (14.3)
 2102 (30.3)42 (33.9)58 (29.3)2 (14.3)
 >=3173 (51.3)69 (55.6)93 (47.0)11 (73.3)

Fisher’s exact test.

AJCC, American Joint Committee on Cancer; ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group.

The study flowchart. Patient demographic and baseline characteristics. Fisher’s exact test. AJCC, American Joint Committee on Cancer; ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group. In total, 17.5% of the patients received prior radiotherapy, 43.6% underwent prior surgery, and 81.6% received prior chemotherapy. The number of patients who received single, double, and triple chemotherapy and their line of apatinib therapy are shown in Supplementary Table 1. All patients received apatinib therapy, including first-line apatinib in 62 (18.4%) patients, second-line apatinib in 102 (30.3%) patients, and third or higher line apatinib in 173 (51.3%) patients. The initial dose of apatinib ranged from 250 mg once daily to 850 mg once daily. The starting dose of apatinib was 250 mg in 124 patients (36.8%) (the low-dose group), 425–500 mg in 198 (58.7%) patients (the mid-dose group), and from 675 to 850 mg in 15 (4.4%) patients (the high-dose group). The three groups differed significantly in lines of apatinib treatment (p = 0.0266), prior surgery (p = 0.0485) and ECOG-PS score (p = 0.0214).

Treatment and apatinib emergent AEs

A total of 166 (49.3%) patients required at least one dose interruption, and 24.3% required at least one dose adjustment (Supplementary Table 2). At the study cutoff (30 October 2018), 327 patients had discontinued treatment. The primary reasons for discontinuation were death (31.8%), disease progression (23.3%), and AEs (22.9%). In total, 86.6% of the overall population reported treatment-emergent AEs of any grade and any cause (Table 2). Commonly reported treatment-emergent AEs (⩾10%) of any grade included, among others, hypertension (44.8%), fatigue (27.9%), and hand–foot syndrome (20.8%). Among grade 3/4 AEs, hypertension remained the most frequent treatment-emergent AE (6.8%), followed by fatigue (3.9%), thrombocytopenia (3.3%), and hand–foot syndrome (3.3%). Hypertension also remained the most frequent treatment-emergent AE in the low-dose group (7.3%), followed by thrombocytopenia (4.0%), fatigue (2.4%), nausea (2.4%), and intestinal obstruction (2.4%). Hypertension also remained the most frequent grade 3/4 treatment-emergent AE in the mid-dose group (6.1%), followed by hand–foot syndrome (4.6%), and fatigue (4.6%). Grade 3/4 hypertension was seen in 2 (2/15, 13.3%) patients and fatigue in 1 (1/15, 6.7%) patient in the high-dose group. No other grade 3/4 AEs were observed in the high-dose group.
Table 2.

Treatment-emergent adverse events (AEs) in the study population, n (%).

AEsAll, n = 337
250 mg, n = 124
425–500 mg, n = 198
675–850 mg, n = 15
Any gradeGrade 3/4Any gradeGrade 3/4Any gradeGrade 3/4Any gradeGrade 3/4
Hematologic toxicities
 Leukopenia19 (5.6)012 (9.7)07 (3.5)000
 Neutropenia8 (2.4)1 (0.3)4 (3.2)1 (0.8)4 (2.5)000
 Anemia6 (1.8)1 (0.3)2 (1.6)04 (2.0)1 (0.5)00
 Thrombocytopenia21 (6.2)11 (3.3)11 (8.9)5 (4.0)9 (4.6)6 (3.1)1 (6.7)0
Nonhematologic toxicities
 Proteinuria45 (13.4)8 (2.4)15 (12.1)2 (1.6)26 (26.5)6 (3.0)4 (26.7)0
 Hypertension151 (44.8)23 (6.8)63 (50.8)9 (7.3)81 (40.9)12 (6.1)7 (46.7)2 (13.3)
 Hand–foot syndrome70 (20.8)11 (3.3)22 (17.7)2 (1.6)46 (23.2)9 (4.6)2 (13.3)0
 Transaminase elevations5 (1.5)1 (0.3)005 (2.5)1 (0.5)00
 Hyperbilirubinemia6 (1.8)03 (2.4)03 (1.5)000
 Bleeding30 (8.9)7 (2.1)10 (8.1)2 (1.6)19 (9.6)5 (2.5)1 (6.7)0
 Fatigue104 (27.9)13 (3.9)45 (36.3)3 (2.4)64 (32.3)9 (4.6)5 (33.3)1 (6.7)
 Alkaline phosphatase elevations1 (0.3)01 (0.8)00000
 Abdominal pain11 (3.3)2 (0.6)7 (5.6)1 (0.8)4 (2.0)1 (0.5)00
 Loss of appetite29 (8.6)5 (1.5)14 (11.3)2 (1.6)15 (7.6)3 (1.5)00
 Hypoalbuminemia4 (1.2)02 (1.6)02 (1.0)000
 Diarrhea30 (8.9)4 (1.2)13 (10.5)017 (8.6)4 (2.0)00
 Arrhythmia19 (5.6)2 (0.6)12 (9.7)07 (3.5)2 (1.0)00
 Nausea55 (16.3)4 (1.2)26 (20.8)3 (2.4)25 (12.6)1 (0.5)4 (26.7)0
 Vomiting20 (5.9)4 (1.2)14 (11.3)2 (1.6)6 (3.0)2 (1.0)00
 Intestinal obstruction9 (2.7)4 (1.2)5 (4.0)3 (2.4)4 (2.0)1 (0.5)00
 Oral mucositis18 (5.3)4 (1.2)10 (8.1)2 (1.6)8 (4.0)2 (1.0)00
 Urinary tract infection15 (4.5)4 (1.2)9 (7.3)2 (1.6)6 (3.0)2 (1.0)00
 Headache7 (2.1)05 (4.0)02 (1.0)000
 Dizziness10 (3.0)03 (2.4)07 (3.5)000
 Lumbar pain3 (0.9)02 (1.6)01 (0.5)000
 Difficulty in swallowing12 (3.6)6 (1.8)3 (2.4)2 (1.6)9 (4.6)4 (2.0)00
 Hoarse voice9 (2.7)1 (0.3)3 (2.4)06 (3.0)1 (0.5)00
Treatment-emergent adverse events (AEs) in the study population, n (%). A total of 166 patients were evaluated for AEs due to apatinib in combination with chemotherapy. Hypertension (14.2%) was the most common grade 3/4 AE in the study population and across the three dosing groups (Supplementary Table 3). Grade 3/4 hypertension occurred in 6 (14.0%) patients and thrombocytopenia in 4 (9.3%) patients in the low-dose group. Grade 3/4 hypertension occurred in 8 (13.1%) patients and thrombocytopenia, bleeding, and fatigue each occurred in 4 (6.6%) patients in the mid-dose group. Furthermore, grade 3/4 hypertension was reported in 1/2 patient in the high-dose group. In total, 231 patients were evaluated for apatinib alone-emergent AEs. Commonly reported apatinib-emergent AEs (⩾10%) of any grade included hypertension (45.0%), fatigue (32.9%), nausea (17.3%), hand–foot syndrome (16.0%), and proteinuria (13.9%) (Table 3). All grade 3/4 apatinib-emergent AEs were <5%. Grade 3/4 AEs included hypertension and proteinuria each in 8 (3.5%) patients, and hand–foot syndrome and fatigue each in 7 (3.0%) patients. Grade 3/4 AEs included hypertension (3.6%), nausea (2.4%), and difficulty in swallowing (2.4%) in the low-dose group. In the mid-dose group, the most common grade 3/4 AEs were hand–foot syndrome (4.4%) and proteinuria (4.4%), followed by fatigue (3.7%), and hypertension (3.0%). Grade 3/4 hypertension and fatigue occurred each in 1/13 (7.7%) patient in the high-dose group.
Table 3.

Apatinib alone-emergent adverse events, n (%).

AEsAll, n = 231
250 mg, n = 83
425–500 mg, n = 135
675–850 mg, n = 13
Any gradeGrade 3/4Any gradeGrade 3/4Any gradeGrade 3/4Any gradeGrade 3/4
Hematologic toxicities
 Leukopenia7 (3.0)05 (6.0)02 (1.5)000
 Neutropenia5 (2.2)03 (3.6)02 (1.5)000
 Anemia2 (0.9)0002 (1.5)000
 Thrombocytopenia8 (3.5)3 (1.3)5 (6.0)1 (1.21)3 (2.2)2 (1.5)00
Nonhematologic toxicities
 Proteinuria32 (13.9)8 (3.5)9 (10.8)2 (2.4)20 (14.8)6 (4.4)3 (23.1)0
 Hypertension104 (45.0)8 (3.5)43 (51.8)3 (3.6)55 (40.7)4 (3.0)6 (46.2)1 (7.7)
 Hand–foot syndrome37 (16.0)7 (3.0)10 (12.1)1 (1.2)26 (19.3)6 (4.4)1 (7.7)0
 Transaminase elevations4 (1.7)1 (0.4)004 (3.0)1 (0.7)00
 Hyperbilirubinemia2 (0.9)01 (1.2)01 (0.7)000
 Bleeding14 (6.0)2 (0.9)4 (4.8)1 (1.2)9 (6.7)1 (0.7)1 (7.7)0
 Fatigue76 (32.9)7 (3.0)28 (33.7)1 (1.2)43 (31.9)5 (3.7)5 (38.5)1 (7.7)
 Alkaline phosphatase elevations1 (0.4)01 (1.2)00000
 Abdominal pain3 (1.3)03 (3.6)00000
 Loss of appetite9 (3.9)1 (0.4)6 (7.2)1 (1.2)3 (2.2)000
 Hypoalbuminemia00000000
 Diarrhea13 (5.6)3 (1.3)5 (6.0)08 (5.9)3 (2.2)00
 Arrhythmia3 (1.3)02 (2.4)01 (0.7)000
 Nausea40 (17.3)3 (1.3)16 (19.3)2 (2.4)20 (14.8)1 (0.7)4 (30.8)0
 Vomiting11 (4.8)2 (0.9)8 (9.6)1 (1.2)3 (2.2)1 (0.7)00
 Intestinal obstruction5 (2.2)1 (0.4)2 (2.4)03 (2.2)1 (0.7)00
 Oral mucositis5 (2.2)02 (2.4)03 (2.2)000
 Urinary tract infection1 (0.4)0001 (0.7)000
 Headache3 (1.3)02 (2.4)01 (0.7)000
 Dizziness3 (1.3)02 (2.4)01 (0.7)000
 Lumbar pain1 (0.4)01 (1.2)00000
 Difficulty in swallowing9 (3.9)5 (2.17)2 (2.4)2 (2.4)7 (5.2)3 (2.2)00
 Hoarse voice00000000
 Stomach pain1 (0.4)0001 (0.7)000
Apatinib alone-emergent adverse events, n (%).

PFS and OS

At the study cutoff time, 31.7% (107/337) patients had died. The primary cause of death was tumor metastasis (73/107, 68.2%). The median PFS was 4.20 months (95% CI, 4.60–4.77) for the overall population (Figure 2(a) and Supplementary Table 4). The median PFS was 4.03 months (95% CI, 2.83–4.63), 4.33 months (95% CI, 3.53–5.10), and 2.87 months (95% CI, 1.40–14.10) for the low-, mid-, and high-dose groups, respectively (χ2 = 1.3839, p = 0.5006) (Figure 2(b)). The median OS was 7.13 months (95% CI, 6.17–7.93) for the overall population (Figure 3(a)). Furthermore, the median OS was 6.27 months (95% CI, 5.50–7.77), 7.43 months (95% CI, 6.17–8.90), and 7.87 months (95% CI, 3.43–14.03) for the low-, mid-, and high-dose groups, respectively (χ2 = 1.7672, p = 0.4133) (Figure 3b). Our multivariate Cox regression analysis showed no significant difference in PFS and OS among the three dose groups (Supplementary Tables 5 and 6).
Figure 2.

Kaplan–Meier estimates of progression-free survival (PFS). (a) PFS for the overall population. The median PFS was 4.20 months (95% CI, 4.60–4.77). (b) PFS stratified by dosing levels of apatinib. The median PFS was 4.03 months (95% CI, 2.83–4.63), 4.33 months (95% CI, 3.53–5.10), and 2.87months (95% CI, 1.40–14.10) for the low-, mid-, and high-dose groups, respectively (χ2 = 1.3839, p = 0.5006).

Figure 3.

Kaplan–Meier estimates of overall survival (OS). (a) OS for the overall population. The median OS was 7.13 months (95% CI, 6.17–7.93). (b) OS stratified by dosing levels of apatinib. The median OS was 6.27 (95% CI, 5.50–7.77), 7.43 (95% CI, 6.17–8.90), and 7.87 months (95% CI, 3.43–14.03) for the low-, mid-, and high-dose groups, respectively (χ2 = 1.7672, p = 0.4133).

Kaplan–Meier estimates of progression-free survival (PFS). (a) PFS for the overall population. The median PFS was 4.20 months (95% CI, 4.60–4.77). (b) PFS stratified by dosing levels of apatinib. The median PFS was 4.03 months (95% CI, 2.83–4.63), 4.33 months (95% CI, 3.53–5.10), and 2.87months (95% CI, 1.40–14.10) for the low-, mid-, and high-dose groups, respectively (χ2 = 1.3839, p = 0.5006). Kaplan–Meier estimates of overall survival (OS). (a) OS for the overall population. The median OS was 7.13 months (95% CI, 6.17–7.93). (b) OS stratified by dosing levels of apatinib. The median OS was 6.27 (95% CI, 5.50–7.77), 7.43 (95% CI, 6.17–8.90), and 7.87 months (95% CI, 3.43–14.03) for the low-, mid-, and high-dose groups, respectively (χ2 = 1.7672, p = 0.4133). Tumor response to apatinib was evaluable for 249 patients. CR/PR was achieved in 14.0% and SD in 62.6% of the patients. The ORR was 14.0% and the DCR was 76.6% (Supplementary Table 4).

Discussion

To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is hitherto the largest real-world study concerning the safety and effectiveness of apatinib in advanced gastric adenocarcinoma. It included data from 337 advanced gastric cancer patients from 29 institutions across 4 provinces of northern China and yielded real-world results for apatinib. As for first-line advanced gastric cancer therapy, apart from extending survival of advanced gastric cancer patients, safety is an important aim for second and subsequent lines of advanced gastric cancer therapy. The current study demonstrated that though treatment-emergent toxicities of any grade were common among advanced gastric cancer patients in our study cohort, they were generally well tolerated, and hypertension remained the only grade 3/4 AEs that occurred in more than 5% of the patients and across the three dosing groups. Furthermore, grade 3/4 apatinib alone-emergent AEs were infrequent (<5%), with hypertension and proteinuria being the most commonly reported grade 3/4 AEs. Hypertension, fatigue, nausea, and hand–foot syndrome were among the most common apatinib alone-emergent AEs of any grade in our study and there were no new unreported AEs versus previous studies.[15-17,24,29] This is consistent with other studies on antiangiogenic agents[15,16,29] for advanced gastric cancer and also with a phase III clinical trial in advanced gastric cancer patients who were refractory to chemotherapy.[17] Noticeably, compared with the phase III trial, our population had a lower incidence of apatinib alone-emergent grade 3–4 hypertension (3.5% versus 4.5%), hand–foot syndrome (3.0% versus 8.5%), while proteinuria (3.5% versus 2.3%) increased slightly. In addition, the incidence of grade 3/4 hematologic toxicities was lower in our cohort compared with the phase III clinical trial: anemia (0% versus 6.3%) and neutropenia (0% versus5.7%) and thrombocytopenia (1.3% versus 2.8%). The difference of apatinib dosage in the two studies may partially explain the overall more benign profile of our study patients. Almost all of our patients (95.5%) were treated with apatinib at a dose lower than 850 mg once daily, which was used in the phase III study.[30] Both the low- (250 mg) and mid-dose (425–500 mg) groups in our study had lower incidences of grade 3–4 hematologic toxicities, and a lower rate of grade 3–4 hand–foot syndrome and proteinuria compared with the phase III trial. The number of patients in the high-dose group is too small to make any meaningful comparison. Approximately half of our patients (49.3%) required at least one dose interruption and a quarter of the patients (24.3%) had at least one dose adjustment. Our higher rate of dose modifications resulting from toxicity compared with the phase III study (21.0%) may be due to the more liberal policy of dose modifications in our study, which allowed both dose reductions and escalations, while the phase III study allowed dose reductions up to three times to a dose level not lower than 375 mg once daily and did not allow dose re-escalation. Furthermore, our study population also had lower incidences of grade 3–4 hand–foot syndrome, hypertension, and proteinuria compared with patients who received apatinib 425 mg twice daily in a phase II study.[24] Though the phase III trial concluded that apatinib at a dose of 850 mg once daily had a favorable safety profile, more than half (55%) of the patients discontinued apatinib therapy because of toxicity.[17] The higher rate of hand–foot syndrome (8.5%) and grade 3/4 neutropenia (5.7%) in the patients receiving apatinib monotherapy in the phase III trial should be considered in the context that advanced gastric cancer patients receive apatinib along with chemotherapy in the real-world setting, and that the combination therapy could have higher rates of hand–foot syndrome and grade 3/4 neutropenia. In a phase II study of Chinese metastatic triple-negative breast cancer patients, the initial daily dose of 750 mg in apatinib monotherapy was lowered to 500 mg daily because of toxicities.[31] In a separate phase II study of Chinese nontriple-negative breast cancer patients, apatinib at 500 mg/day was also associated with noticeable grade 3/4 AEs [hypertension (20.5%), hand–foot syndrome (10.3%), and proteinuria (5.1%)].[32] These studies suggest that among Chinese cancer patients, lower doses of apatinib may be more preferable owing to safety concerns. A real-world study also demonstrated that lower doses of apatinib could benefit patients with less toxicity in advanced gastric cancer patients.[27] Only a small proportion of our patients followed the initial dosing regimen of 850 mg once daily specified in the study protocol owing to AEs. Lower doses of apatinib were given following feedback from oncologists and recommendation by the drug manufacturer and an expert consensus.[28] Furthermore, approximately half of our patients were treated by first- or second-line chemotherapy. Given the dismal prognosis of advanced gastric cancer patients despite chemotherapy, combination regimens such as ramucirumab and paclitaxel have been used as first- or second-line treatment.[33,34] Therefore, in our study, advanced gastric cancer patients who were treated by first- or second-line chemotherapy were also offered apatinib therapy. In an ongoing real-world study of 954 gastric cancer patients in China, 679 patients with metastatic gastric cancer including first-line apatinib in 287 (42.2%) patients, second-line apatinib in 207 (30.5%) patients, and third-line apatinib in 185 (27.3%) patients were enrolled. Among all of 954 patients, 375 patients were evaluated for effectiveness.[35] The interim results of the study showed that patients receiving the combination regimen of apatinib and chemotherapy had significantly longer median PFS versus those receiving apatinib monotherapy (apatinib plus chemotherapy: 5.03 months, 95% CI, 3.70–7.30 versus apatinib monotherapy: 3.33 months, 95% CI, 2.37–4.33; p = 0.003). Effectiveness analysis of the current multicenter study showed that the median PFS was 4.20 months (95% CI, 4.60–4.77) for our overall population, which is numerically higher than that reported in the phase III trial [2.6 months (95% CI, 2.0–2.9)]. The median PFS is also numerically higher in our low-dose group [4.03 months (95% CI, 2.83–4.63)], and the mid-dose group [4.33 months (95% CI, 3.53–5.10)], while the high-dose group [2.87 months (95% CI, 1.40–14.10)] had a similar PFS to that of the phase III trial. Meanwhile, our overall population had a median OS [7.13 months (95% CI, 6.17–7.93)] that is largely comparable with that of the phase III trial [6.5 months (95% CI, 4.8–7.6)], which is numerically lower than our mid-dose group [7.43 (95% CI, 6.17–8.90)] and the high-dose group [7.87 months (95% CI, 3.43–14.03)]. Moreover, our patients also had a higher ORR than that of the phase III trial (14.0% versus 2.84%) as well as a higher DCR (76.6% versus 42.05%). Our effectiveness data should be interpreted with the consideration that the patients had received different lines of apatinib therapy, which was given at different doses and with or without concurrent chemotherapy. Our data suggest that lower doses of apatinib (250–500 mg) may yield comparable survival outcomes with those achieved with a higher dose (850 mg) with fewer side effects. Apatinib has recently emerged as a promising antiangiogenesis agent for advanced gastric cancer and has been approved by CFDA in China for the treatment of patients with advanced gastric cancer refractory to two or more lines of prior chemotherapy.[36,37] Our study showed that slightly less than half of our patients used apatinib as first- or second-line therapy. Importantly, our data also demonstrated that advanced gastric cancer patients received apatinib therapy at much lower doses than that used in clinical trials. We found that lower doses of apatinib, particularly 425–500 mg, yielded clinical outcomes comparable with those from higher dose of the drug and with lower incidences of grade 3–4 AEs versus 850 mg apatinib as used in the clinical trials. In the current report, we did not analyze line-specific outcomes. It would be of interest to analyze the safety and outcome of apatinib as third or higher line therapy for advanced gastric cancer in this real-world setting and delineate the safety and effectiveness of moderate doses of apatinib versus high doses of apatinib. Apart from efficacy, safety is a very important consideration in apatinib as second or higher lines of treatment in advanced gastric cancer.[13,22] One limitation of the current study is a lack of stringent inclusion and exclusion criteria, leading to a heterogeneous patient population. Though the study was carried out in a real-world setting, all the patients received apatinib therapy at tertiary care institutions. Therefore, our findings may not be applicable to primary and secondary care settings. Furthermore, this study did not have a control arm and effectiveness and safety data were compared mainly with the phase III trial on apatinib. In addition, this study has a noninterventional design and is observational. There were no standardized assessments at the beginning dose as in the clinical trials. While clinical trials provide invaluable information, observational noninterventional studies are important sources of information about the use of agents in the real-world clinical setting. This current trial, to the best of the authors’ knowledge, is the first real-world study of advanced gastric cancer patients investigating apatinib utilization in routine clinical practice. The study offers the first-hand effectiveness and safety data of apatinib in the real world, which are informative for physicians and patients. This study includes patients in first- and second-line treatment, which can provide evidence for the application of apatinib in the first- and second-line treatment for gastric cancer. Finally, safety analysis of this study helps gain better knowledge of and familiarization with possible side effects and how to deal with them.

Conclusion

This real-world data demonstrated that patients given apatinib at the dose level of 425–500 mg once daily showed similar effectiveness to phase II/III clinical trial with a favorable safety profile. The incidence of AEs is consistent with that of phase II/III clinical data, and no new AEs were reported in the present study. Click here for additional data file. Supplemental material, Supplementary_List_I for An open label, multicenter, noninterventional study of apatinib in advanced gastric cancer patients (AHEAD-G202) by Xiang Wang, Ruixing Zhang, Nan Du, Mudan Yang, Aimin Zang, Likun Liu, Junyan Yu, Jinghua Gao, Junping Zhang, Zhanzhao Fu, Yuchuan Ren, Liwen Ma, Jun Guo, Qingshan Li, Xiaomei Li, Zaiwen Fan, Xiang Song, Zheng Liu, Yan Zhang, Guozhong Li, Zhonghe Yu, Jianfeng Diao, Junmei Jia, Feng Liang, Huaqing Wang, Junzhong Sun, Yunge Gao, Ping Yang, Chunmei Bai, Xiubao Ren and Diansheng Zhong in Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology Click here for additional data file. Supplemental material, Supplementary_tables-clean for An open label, multicenter, noninterventional study of apatinib in advanced gastric cancer patients (AHEAD-G202) by Xiang Wang, Ruixing Zhang, Nan Du, Mudan Yang, Aimin Zang, Likun Liu, Junyan Yu, Jinghua Gao, Junping Zhang, Zhanzhao Fu, Yuchuan Ren, Liwen Ma, Jun Guo, Qingshan Li, Xiaomei Li, Zaiwen Fan, Xiang Song, Zheng Liu, Yan Zhang, Guozhong Li, Zhonghe Yu, Jianfeng Diao, Junmei Jia, Feng Liang, Huaqing Wang, Junzhong Sun, Yunge Gao, Ping Yang, Chunmei Bai, Xiubao Ren and Diansheng Zhong in Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology
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1.  Pan-Asian adapted ESMO Clinical Practice Guidelines for the management of patients with metastatic gastric cancer: a JSMO-ESMO initiative endorsed by CSCO, KSMO, MOS, SSO and TOS.

Authors:  K Muro; E Van Cutsem; Y Narita; G Pentheroudakis; E Baba; J Li; M-H Ryu; W I Wan Zamaniah; W-P Yong; K-H Yeh; K Kato; Z Lu; B C Cho; I M Nor; M Ng; L-T Chen; T E Nakajima; K Shitara; H Kawakami; T Tsushima; T Yoshino; F Lordick; E Martinelli; E C Smyth; D Arnold; H Minami; J Tabernero; J-Y Douillard
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2019-01-01       Impact factor: 32.976

2.  Targeted therapy: Apatinib - new third-line option for refractory gastric or GEJ cancer.

Authors:  Toru Aoyama; Takaki Yoshikawa
Journal:  Nat Rev Clin Oncol       Date:  2016-04-13       Impact factor: 66.675

3.  Multicenter phase II study of apatinib, a novel VEGFR inhibitor in heavily pretreated patients with metastatic triple-negative breast cancer.

Authors:  Xichun Hu; Jian Zhang; Binghe Xu; Zefei Jiang; Joseph Ragaz; Zhongsheng Tong; Qingyuan Zhang; Xiaojia Wang; Jifeng Feng; Danmei Pang; Minhao Fan; Jin Li; Biyun Wang; Zhonghua Wang; Qunling Zhang; Si Sun; Chunmei Liao
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2014-03-20       Impact factor: 7.396

4.  Salvage chemotherapy for pretreated gastric cancer: a randomized phase III trial comparing chemotherapy plus best supportive care with best supportive care alone.

Authors:  Jung Hun Kang; Soon Il Lee; Do Hyoung Lim; Keon-Woo Park; Sung Yong Oh; Hyuk-Chan Kwon; In Gyu Hwang; Sang-Cheol Lee; Eunmi Nam; Dong Bok Shin; Jeeyun Lee; Joon Oh Park; Young Suk Park; Ho Yeong Lim; Won Ki Kang; Se Hoon Park
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2012-03-12       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  Global cancer statistics, 2012.

Authors:  Lindsey A Torre; Freddie Bray; Rebecca L Siegel; Jacques Ferlay; Joannie Lortet-Tieulent; Ahmedin Jemal
Journal:  CA Cancer J Clin       Date:  2015-02-04       Impact factor: 508.702

6.  Efficacy and safety of apatinib as second-line therapy for advanced gastric cancer: a single-center observational study.

Authors:  Yong Zhang; Miaomiao Gou; Chun Han; Juan Li; Lijie Wang; Qian Qiao; Yi Hu; Li Bai; Zhefeng Liu
Journal:  Anticancer Drugs       Date:  2018-02       Impact factor: 2.248

7.  Combination of cisplatin/S-1 in the treatment of patients with advanced gastric or gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma: Results of noninferiority and safety analyses compared with cisplatin/5-fluorouracil in the First-Line Advanced Gastric Cancer Study.

Authors:  J A Ajani; M Buyse; M Lichinitser; V Gorbunova; G Bodoky; J Y Douillard; S Cascinu; V Heinemann; R Zaucha; A Carrato; D Ferry; V Moiseyenko
Journal:  Eur J Cancer       Date:  2013-07-27       Impact factor: 9.162

8.  Cancer statistics in China, 2015.

Authors:  Wanqing Chen; Rongshou Zheng; Peter D Baade; Siwei Zhang; Hongmei Zeng; Freddie Bray; Ahmedin Jemal; Xue Qin Yu; Jie He
Journal:  CA Cancer J Clin       Date:  2016-01-25       Impact factor: 508.702

9.  Second-line chemotherapy versus supportive cancer treatment in advanced gastric cancer: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  H S Kim; H J Kim; S Y Kim; T Y Kim; K W Lee; S K Baek; T Y Kim; M H Ryu; B H Nam; D Y Zang
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2013-08-13       Impact factor: 32.976

10.  Multicenter phase II study of apatinib in non-triple-negative metastatic breast cancer.

Authors:  Xichun Hu; Jun Cao; Wenwei Hu; Changping Wu; Yueyin Pan; Li Cai; Zhongsheng Tong; Shusen Wang; Jin Li; Zhonghua Wang; Biyun Wang; Xiaoyu Chen; Hao Yu
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2014-11-07       Impact factor: 4.430

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  10 in total

Review 1.  Apatinib: A Novel Antiangiogenic Drug in Monotherapy or Combination Immunotherapy for Digestive System Malignancies.

Authors:  Haosheng Li; Haiyan Huang; Tao Zhang; Haoran Feng; Shaodong Wang; Yaqi Zhang; Xiaopin Ji; Xi Cheng; Ren Zhao
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2022-06-29       Impact factor: 8.786

2.  Efficacy and safety of apatinib in the treatment of osteosarcoma: a single-arm meta-analysis among Chinese patients.

Authors:  Hui Yao; Xuyu Chen; Xiaodong Tan
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2021-04-23       Impact factor: 4.430

3.  Apatinib combined with S-1 as second-line therapy in advanced gastric cancer.

Authors:  Zhi-Yuan Qiu; Rong Qin; Guang-Yu Tian; Zhao Zhang; Meifang Chen; Han He; Yan Xi; Yan Wang
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2021-04-30       Impact factor: 1.817

4.  Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals a pro-invasive cancer-associated fibroblast subgroup associated with poor clinical outcomes in patients with gastric cancer.

Authors:  Xuechun Li; Zhao Sun; Gongxin Peng; Yi Xiao; Junchao Guo; Bin Wu; Xiaoyi Li; Weixun Zhou; Jiarui Li; Zhe Li; Chunmei Bai; Lin Zhao; Qin Han; Robert Chunhua Zhao; Xiaoyue Wang
Journal:  Theranostics       Date:  2022-01-01       Impact factor: 11.556

5.  Efficacy and Safety of Apatinib for Elderly Patients with Advanced or Metastatic Gastric Cancer After Failure of at Least First-Line Chemotherapy: A Multi-Center, Single-Arm, Phase II Study.

Authors:  Dengfeng Ren; Guoxiu Wang; Yu Zhang; Jie Kan; Qiuxia Dong; Junhui Zhao; Faxiang Ji; Hao Li; Yushuang Luo; Mingzhe Lin; Guoyuan Li; Zhibo Liu; Xinfu Ma; Qijing Guo; Fuxing Zhao; Guoshuang Shen; Jiuda Zhao
Journal:  Onco Targets Ther       Date:  2021-08-18       Impact factor: 4.147

6.  Apatinib inhibits tumour progression and promotes antitumour efficacy of cytotoxic drugs in oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Yanyan Chi; Feng Wang; Yana Zhang; Zhengzheng Shan; Weili Tao; Yujin Lian; Dao Xin; Qingxia Fan; Yan Sun
Journal:  J Cell Mol Med       Date:  2022-03-21       Impact factor: 5.310

7.  Pyrotinib combined with apatinib for targeting metastatic non-small cell lung cancer with HER2 alterations: a prospective, open-label, single-arm phase 2 study (PATHER2).

Authors:  Guangjian Yang; Haiyan Xu; Yaning Yang; Shuyang Zhang; Fei Xu; Xuezhi Hao; Junling Li; Puyuan Xing; Xingsheng Hu; Yutao Liu; Lin Wang; Lin Lin; Zhijie Wang; Jianchun Duan; Jie Wang; Yan Wang
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2022-08-29       Impact factor: 11.150

Review 8.  Research progress in targeted therapy and immunotherapy for gastric cancer.

Authors:  Xuewei Li; Jun Xu; Jun Xie; Wenhui Yang
Journal:  Chin Med J (Engl)       Date:  2022-06-05       Impact factor: 6.133

9.  Safety and effectiveness of apatinib in elderly patients with metastatic gastric cancer: a sub-analysis from the large-scale, prospective observational study of apatinib for gastric cancer treatment in a real-world clinical setting (AHEAD-G202).

Authors:  Xiang Wang; Diansheng Zhong; Junping Zhang; Nan Du; Yuchuan Ren; Jinghua Gao; Likun Liu; Junyan Yu; Xiaomei Li; Liwen Ma; Aimin Zang; Mudan Yang; Yan Zhang; Jun Guo; Zheng Liu; Zhanzhao Fu; Junmei Jia; Jianfeng Diao; Zaiwen Fan; Xiang Song; Guozhong Li; Huaqing Wang; Chunmei Bai; Mei Guan; Xiubao Ren; Ruixing Zhang
Journal:  J Gastrointest Oncol       Date:  2022-08

10.  Real-World Data on Apatinib Efficacy - Results of a Retrospective Study in Metastatic Breast Cancer Patients Pretreated With Multiline Treatment.

Authors:  Zhaoyun Liu; Jing Shan; Qian Yu; Xinzhao Wang; Xiang Song; Fukai Wang; Chao Li; Zhiyong Yu; Jinming Yu
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2021-06-10       Impact factor: 6.244

  10 in total

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