| Literature DB >> 35957909 |
Adamantia Nikolaidi1, Elena Fountzilas2,3, Florentia Fostira4, Amanda Psyrri5, Helen Gogas6, Christos Papadimitriou7.
Abstract
Ovarian cancer remains the leading cause of death from gynecological cancer. Survival is significantly related to the stage of the disease at diagnosis. Of quite importance is primary cytoreductive surgery, having as a goal to remove all visible tumor tissue, and is the standard primary treatment in combination with platinum-based chemotherapy for patients with advanced ovarian carcinoma. Neo-adjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) has been implemented mostly in treating advanced disease, with studies performed having numerous limitations. Data extrapolated from these studies have not shown inferiority survival of NACT, compared to primary debulking surgery. The role of NACT is of particular interest because of the intrinsic mechanisms that are involved in the process, which can be proven as therapeutic approaches with enormous potential. NACT increases immune infiltration and programmed death ligand-1 (PDL-1) expression, induces local immune activation, and can potentiate the immunogenicity of immune-exclude high grade serous ovarian tumors, while the combination of NACT with bevacizumab, PARP inhibitors or immunotherapy remains to be evaluated. This article summarizes all available data on studies implementing NACT in the treatment of ovarian cancer, focusing on clinical outcomes and study limitations. High mortality rates observed among ovarian cancer patients necessitates the identification of more effective treatments, along with biomarkers that will aid treatment individualization.Entities:
Keywords: NACT; PARPi; bevacizumab; immunotherapy; ovarian cancer
Year: 2022 PMID: 35957909 PMCID: PMC9360510 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.820128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 5.738
Randomized phase III trials that compared neoadjuvant chemotherapy and interval debulking surgery with primary debulking surgery in patients of advanced epithelial ovarian cancer.
| Study | Population | No of Patients | Interventions | Complete Resection Rate (%) | PFS | OS | Median Operative Time (min) | Peri- and postoperative AEs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EORTC | Patients with FIGO stage IIB-IV EOC | 138 |
| NA | 13 | 20 | NA | NR | |
| EORTC 55971 Vergote et al, 2010 ( | Patients with FIGO stage IIIC-IV EOC, fallopian-tube carcinoma, or primary peritoneal carcinoma | 336 |
| 19.4 | 12 | 29 | 165 (312 when R0) | In the PDS arm postoperative death 2.5% versus 0.7% in NACT-IDS; | |
| CHORUS | Patients with FIGO stage III-IV EOC, fallopian-tube carcinoma, or primary peritoneal carcinoma | 276 |
| 17 | 10.7 | 22.6 | 120 | PDS group had more Grade 3 or 4 AEs (24%) than the NACT-IDS group (14%) | |
| JCOG0602 | Patients with FIGO stage III-IV EOC, fallopian-tube carcinoma, or primary peritoneal carcinoma | 149 |
| 12 | 15.1 | 49 | 302 | Grade 3 or 4 AEs after surgery were 15% in PDS arm versus 4.6% in NACT-IDS ( | |
| SCORPION trial | Patients with stage IIIC-IV EOC and PI | 84 |
| 47.6 | 15 | 41 | 460.6 | Major complications in 46.4% of patients in the PDS arm versus 9.5% in NACT-IDS ( | |
Progression-free survival.
overall survival.
adverse events.
primary debulking surgery.
neoadjyvant chemotherapy.
interval debulking surgery.
epithelial ovarian cancer.
laparoscopic predictive index.
Selected current phase II and III clinical trials investigating neoadjuvant chemotherapy in epithelial ovarian cancer.
| Study Identifier | Type of Study | Study Population | Primary endpoint (s) | Regimen/Treatment Arms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT04885270 | Phase II | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage IIIC-IV) | Optimal debulking rate | 2-6 cycles of NACT |
| NCT04606914 | Phase II | Patients with high grade serous epithelial ovarian cancer (FIGO stage III-IV) | PFS | NAT with 4 cycles of Carboplatin AUC 5 (q 3 weeks) plus 3 cycles of Mirvetuximab |
| NCT03448354 | Non-randomized | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer | PFS |
|
| NCT02125513 | Randomized Phase II | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage IIIC-IV) | R0 resection rate |
|
| NCT03579394 | Randomized Phase II | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage IIIB-IVA) | DFS |
|
| NCT02859038 | Phase III | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage IIIC-IV) | OS |
|
| NCT04515602 | Phase III | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage IIIC-IV) | OS |
|
| NCT04575935 | Phase III | Patients with high grade ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage IIIC-IV) | DFS |
|
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
interval debulking surgery.
progression free survival.
objective response rate.
a high affinity humanized monoclonal antibody against folate receptor α (FRα) that is conjugated to a cytotoxic maytansinoid.
hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy.
disease free survival.
overall survibal.
primary debulking surgery.
Studies that evaluated the incorporation of bevacizumab into the neoadjuvant treatment of advanced epithelial ovarian cancer.
| Study | Type of Study | Population | No of Patients | NACT | Complete Resection Rate (%) | PFS | Toxicity of IDS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Petrillo et all, 2015 ( | Single-institutional case-control study | Unresectable high-grade serous | 75 |
| 72.3 | 10 | One death (5%) due to perforation |
| GEICO1205/NOVA | Randomized Phase II open label multicenter study | Patients with high grade serous or endometrioid EOC, FIGO stage III-IV, ECOG 0-2, considered unresectable and in whom NACT and IDS were planned | 71 |
| 63.6 | 20.13 | 69.7% Grade 3-4 AEs |
| ANTHALYA | Randomized multicenter, open-label, non-comparative phase II study | Patients with initially unresectable FIGO stage IIIC/IV ovarian, tubal or peritoneal adenocarcinoma. | 95 |
| 58.6 | NR | 63% Grade 3-4 AEs in Control Arm versus 62% in Bevacizumab Arm |
| MITO-16A-MaNGO OV2A | Phase IV | Subgroup analysis of FIGO stage IIIB- IV patients who received NACT followed by IDS | 79 | 3-4 cycles of Carboplatin AUC 5, Paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 plus Bevacizumab 15 mg/kg, every 3 weeks. Postoperatively, all patients received the same regimen followed by Bevacizumab maintenance for up to 16 cycles | 63.5 | NR | The rate of perioperative complications was similar to what expected without Bevacizumab |
| Komiyama et al, 2018 ( | Single‐center | Patients with stage IIIC-IVA EOC, fallopian tube cancer, or primary peritoneal cancer in whose optimal surgery is unlikely to be | 33 | 4 cycles of Carboplatin AUC 5 and Paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 plus 3 courses of Bevacizumab 15 mg/kg, every 3 weeks. Postoperatively, all patients received another 4 cycles of chemotherapy plus Bevacizumab (cycles 5-22) | 60.9 | NR | No complications ≥ Grade 3 |
Epithelial ovarian cancer.
neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
progression-free survival.
interval debulking surgery.
adverse events.
not reported.
Selected current clinical trials investigating the role of PARP inhibitors in the neoadjuvant setting.
| Study Identifier | Type of Study | Study Population | Primary endpoint (s) | Regimen/Treatment Arms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT04598321 | Phase I | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage II-IV) and documented mutation in | Proportion of patients completing the planned 9 weeks of treatment without disease progression | NAT |
| NCT03943173 | Phase I | Patients with high grade ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage IIIC-IV) with documented BRCA pathway mutations | Feasibility | NAT with Olaparib on days 1-28. Treatment repeats every 28 days for up to 2 cycles in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. After NAT, patients either undergo surgery then receive standard chemotherapy for up to 4 cycles or receive standard chemotherapy for up to 4 cycles then undergo surgery at the discretion of the treating physician |
| NCT04507841 | Phase II | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage III or IV) | R0 resection rate and | NAT with niraparib 200 mg, once a day |
| NCT04284852 | Phase II | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage III-IV) | PFS | 3 - 4 cycles of NAT containing either Carboplatin or Cisplatin, then IDS |
| NCT02489006 | Phase II | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer | Difference in levels of PAR or PARP-1 before and after study treatment | Olaparib 300 mg orally twice per day for 6 weeks, followed by IDS, then followed by Platinum-based chemotherapy and Olaparib maintenance, after chemotherapy |
| NCT03393884 | Phase I Randomized Phase II | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage III-IV) | PFS |
|
Neoadjuvant therapy.
objective response rate.
progression free survival.
interval debulking surgery.
a gene-based immunotherapy, comprising a human IL-12 gene expression plasmid and a synthetic plasmid delivery system, delivered intraperitoneally to produce local and persistent levels of IL-12.
intraperitoneally.
Selected current clinical trials investigating the role of immunotherapy in the neoadjuvant setting.
| Study Identifier | Type of Study | Study Population | Primary endpoint (s) | Regimen/Treatment Arms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT04163094 | Phase I | Patients with epithelial ovarian cancer who are intended to be treated with NAT | Change from baseline W_ova1 vaccine | NAT with 3 cycles of Carboplatin + Paclitaxel, followed by IDS |
| NCT03126812 | Phase I/II | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage IV) | Number of T-cells in peripheral blood and tissue samples | NAT with Carboplatin AUC 6 (q 3 weeks) + weekly Paclitaxel 80 mg/m2 and Pembrolizumab 200 mg starting cycle 2 followed by IDS (Time Frame: at week 12) |
| NCT03899610 | Phase II | Patients with FIGO stage IIIC-IV ovarian cancer | PFS | NAT with Paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 and Carboplatin AUC 5-6 + Durvalumab 1500 mg + Tremelimumab 75 mg (q 3 weeks for 3 cycles), followed by IDS, then followed by Chemotherapy + Durvalumab 1120 mg (q 3 weeks for 3 cycles) and maintenance with Durvalumab (9 cycles) |
| NCT02834975 | Phase II | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage III-IV) | pRR | NAT with Paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 plus Carboplatin AUC 6 and Pembrolizumab 200 mg q 3 weeks |
| NCT04815408 | Randomized Phase II | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage IIIC-IV) | PFS |
|
| NCT03393884 | Phase I Randomized Phase II | Patients with ovarian, primary peritoneal or fallopian tube cancer (FIGO stage III-IV) | PFS |
|
Neoadjuvant treatment.
a vaccine consisting of mRNA encoding three tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) specific for ovarian cancer that are encapsulated in liposomes.
interval debulking surgery.
progression free survival.
pathological response rate.
hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy.
tislelizumab (BGB-A317) is a humanized IgG4 anti–PD-1 monoclonal antibody specifically designed to minimize binding to FcγR on macrophages.
a gene-based immunotherapy, comprising a human IL-12 gene expression plasmid and a synthetic plasmid delivery system, delivered intraperitoneally to produce local and persistent levels of IL-12.
intraperitoneally.