Literature DB >> 33826614

Identifying treatment options for BRAFV600 wild-type metastatic melanoma: A SU2C/MRA genomics-enabled clinical trial.

Patricia M LoRusso1, Aleksandar Sekulic2,3, Jeffrey A Sosman4, Winnie S Liang3, John Carpten5, David W Craig5, David B Solit6, Alan H Bryce2, Jeffrey A Kiefer3, Jessica Aldrich3, Sara Nasser3, Rebecca Halperin3, Sara A Byron3, Mary Jo Pilat7, Scott A Boerner1, Diane Durecki1, William P D Hendricks3, Daniel Enriquez3, Tyler Izatt3, Jonathan Keats3, Christophe Legendre3, Svetomir N Markovic8, Amy Weise9, Fatima Naveed3, Jessica Schmidt2, Gargi D Basu3, Shobana Sekar3, Jonathan Adkins3, Erica Tassone3, Karthigayini Sivaprakasam3, Victoria Zismann3, Valerie S Calvert10, Emanuel F Petricoin10, Leslie Anne Fecher11, Christopher Lao11, J Paul Eder1, Nicholas J Vogelzang12, Jane Perlmutter13, Mark Gorman14, Barbara Manica9, Lisa Fox1, Nicholas Schork3, Daniel Zelterman1, Michelle DeVeaux1,15, Richard W Joseph16, C Lance Cowey17, Jeffrey M Trent3.   

Abstract

Although combination BRAF and MEK inhibitors are highly effective for the 40-50% of cutaneous metastatic melanomas harboring BRAFV600 mutations, targeted agents have been ineffective for BRAFV600wild-type (wt) metastatic melanomas. The SU2C Genomics-Enabled Medicine for Melanoma Trial utilized a Simon two-stage optimal design to assess whether comprehensive genomic profiling improves selection of molecular-based therapies for BRAFV600wt metastatic melanoma patients who had progressed on standard-of-care therapy, which may include immunotherapy. Of the response-evaluable patients, binimetinib was selected for 20 patients randomized to the genomics-enabled arm, and nine were treated on the alternate treatment arm. Response rates for 27 patients treated with targeted recommendations included one (4%) partial response, 18 (67%) with stable disease, and eight (30%) with progressive disease. Post-trial genomic and protein pathway activation mapping identified additional drug classes that may be considered for future studies. Our results highlight the complexity and heterogeneity of metastatic melanomas, as well as how the lack of response in this trial may be associated with limitations including monotherapy drug selection and the dearth of available single and combination molecularly-driven therapies to treat BRAFV600wt metastatic melanomas.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33826614     DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0248097

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  1 in total

1.  Inefficiency of two-stage designs in phase II oncology clinical trials with high proportion of inevaluable patients.

Authors:  Lingyun Ji; Jennifer Whangbo; John E Levine; Todd A Alonzo
Journal:  Contemp Clin Trials       Date:  2022-07-19       Impact factor: 2.261

  1 in total

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