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Clinical Trial Results

Summaries of Newsworthy Clinical Trial Results

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    Posted: 06/18/2008
Related Pages
Search for Clinical Trials 1
NCI's PDQ® registry of cancer clinical trials.

Colon and Rectal Cancer Home Page 2
NCI's gateway for information about colon and rectal cancer.

Drug Information Summaries 3
NCI's drug information summaries provide consumer-friendly information about certain drugs that are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to treat cancer or conditions related to cancer.

Highlights from ASCO 2008 4
A collection of links to material summarizing some of the important clinical trial results announced at the 2008 annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO).
Colorectal Cancer Drugs Require Careful Patient Selection

Adapted from the NCI Cancer Bulletin, vol. 5/no. 12, June 10, 2008 (see the current issue 5).

Patients with advanced colorectal cancer who have mutant forms of the gene KRAS in their tumors should not receive chemotherapy plus cetuximab 6 (Erbitux®), because they are unlikely to benefit from the treatment and should be spared the side effects and cost, researchers said at the recent American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting in Chicago.

Based on a growing body of evidence, including findings presented at the meeting, several experts predicted that it will become standard practice to test all colorectal tumors for mutations in the KRAS gene before starting patients with advanced disease on therapies involving cetuximab and a similar drug, panitumumab 7 (Vectibix®).

"I believe it is now warranted to test all patients being considered for these agents," said Dr. Gail Eckhardt of the University of Colorado Denver, who was not involved in the research and discussed the findings at ASCO. "Patients with KRAS mutations should not receive cetuximab or panitumumab in [certain] settings."

These drugs are designed to block the activity of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) protein, which is often overactive in colorectal cancer.

An estimated 30 to 40 percent of colorectal tumors carry KRAS mutations, and commercial tests are available. Screening could proceed based on the breast cancer model, where women undergo testing for genetic characteristics of their tumors prior to treatment with trastuzumab 8 (Herceptin®).

"KRAS is the first molecular marker for targeted therapy in combination with standard chemotherapy as a first-line treatment for metastatic colorectal cancer," said Dr. Eric Van Cutsem of Gasthuisberg University Hospital in Leuven, Belgium, at the meeting. "If we know in advance that a patient has a KRAS mutation, then we know we don't have to treat the patient [with these agents]."

He presented new results 9 from the CRYSTAL trial, which in 2007 10 showed that some patients with metastatic disease benefited from cetuximab plus chemotherapy with respect to progression-free survival. But not all patients benefited and given growing interest in the KRAS gene, the researchers went back and looked at tumor tissue from 587 of the nearly 1,200 patients in the trial.

The results were striking: Only patients with normal KRAS genes benefited. Perhaps most important, findings from other studies presented at the 2008 ASCO meeting, including the OPUS 11 and EVEREST 12 trials, support the findings from the CRYSTAL trial. Retrospective analyses of KRAS gene status and treatment outcomes have now been performed on 1,200 patients with advanced colorectal cancer from separate randomized trials.

"We now have substantial evidence that mutations in KRAS are a negative predictive marker for the use of cetuximab with chemotherapy and for panitumumab as a single agent based on results from a variety of trials," said Dr. Margaret Mooney of the National Cancer Institute's Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program, who was not involved in the research.

Before the meeting, European regulators approved cetuximab plus chemotherapy as a first-line treatment for colorectal cancer in patients with normal KRAS. Panitumumab is approved in Europe for treating advanced colorectal cancer, but also only in patients with the normal KRAS gene.

Prospective studies are now needed to validate the marker. Trials such as CRYSTAL were not designed to answer questions about cetuximab and KRAS, and the researchers do not have tumor tissue from all patients. These patients could provide useful information in developing new therapies.

Dr. Eckhardt stressed the importance of communicating to patients with KRAS mutations that current chemotherapy regimens are effective. "Hopefully," she added, this is "only the beginning of the era of individualized therapy for patients with colon cancer."



Glossary Terms

EGFR
The protein found on the surface of some cells and to which epidermal growth factor binds, causing the cells to divide. It is found at abnormally high levels on the surface of many types of cancer cells, so these cells may divide excessively in the presence of epidermal growth factor. Also called epidermal growth factor receptor, ErbB1, and HER1.
gene
The functional and physical unit of heredity passed from parent to offspring. Genes are pieces of DNA, and most genes contain the information for making a specific protein.
marker
A diagnostic indication that disease may develop.
metastatic (meh-tuh-STA-tik)
Having to do with metastasis, which is the spread of cancer from one part of the body to another.
mutation (myoo-TAY-shun)
Any change in the DNA of a cell. Mutations may be caused by mistakes during cell division, or they may be caused by exposure to DNA-damaging agents in the environment. Mutations can be harmful, beneficial, or have no effect. If they occur in cells that make eggs or sperm, they can be inherited; if mutations occur in other types of cells, they are not inherited. Certain mutations may lead to cancer or other diseases.
progression-free survival (pruh-GREH-shun... ser-VY-vul)
The length of time during and after treatment in which a patient is living with a disease that does not get worse. Progression-free survival may be used in a clinical study or trial to help find out how well a new treatment works.
prospective
In medicine, a study or clinical trial in which participants are identified and then followed forward in time.
randomized clinical trial
A study in which the participants are assigned by chance to separate groups that compare different treatments; neither the researchers nor the participants can choose which group. Using chance to assign people to groups means that the groups will be similar and that the treatments they receive can be compared objectively. At the time of the trial, it is not known which treatment is best. It is the patient's choice to be in a randomized trial.
retrospective
Looking back at events that have already taken place.
targeted therapy (... THAYR-uh-pee)
A type of treatment that uses drugs or other substances, such as monoclonal antibodies, to identify and attack specific cancer cells without harming normal cells. Targeted therapy may be less harmful to normal cells than other types of cancer treatments


Table of Links

1http://www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials/search
2http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/colon-and-rectal
3http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/druginfo/alphalist
4http://www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials/asco2008/highlights
5http://www.cancer.gov/ncicancerbulletin/cancerbulletin
6http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/druginfo/cetuximab
7http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/druginfo/panitumumab
8http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/druginfo/trastuzumab
9http://www.abstract.asco.org/AbstView_55_34491.html
10http://www.asco.org/ASCO/Abstracts+&+Virtual+Meeting/Abstracts?&vmview=
abst_detail_view&confID=47&abstractID=33250
11http://www.abstract.asco.org/AbstView_55_35260.html
12http://www.abstract.asco.org/AbstView_55_34722.html