Clinical Trial Results
Mesothelioma Trial Results
1. Largest-Yet Mesothelioma Study Shows Survival Benefit with New Drug
- Researchers with the largest phase III trial to date for
mesothelioma, an aggressive cancer affecting the lining of the lung,
reported results showing that patients on a new chemotherapy drug
regimen live longer and have less pain than those on an older drug. The
findings were announced at the annual meeting of the American Society
of Clinical Oncology meeting in Orlando, Fla., on May 20, 2002.
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Largest-Yet Mesothelioma Study Shows Survival Benefit with New Drug
Researchers with the largest phase III trial
to date for mesothelioma, an aggressive cancer affecting the lining of
the lung, reported results showing that patients on a new chemotherapy
drug regimen
live longer and have less pain than those on an older drug. The
findings were announced at the annual meeting of the American Society
of Clinical Oncology meeting in Orlando, Fla., on May 20, 2002.
Pemetrexed
(brand name Alimta?) is a novel antifolate, a class of drugs that
targets the folic acid metabolic pathway, which effects availability of
certain B complex vitamins. The results of the trial show that tumors
shrank in 41 percent of patients on pemetrexed in combination with a
more commonly used chemotherapy agent called cisplatin.
Only 17 percent of patients receiving cisplatin alone experienced tumor
shrinkage. Additionally, those on the pemetrexed combination lived
nearly three months longer than those on cisplatin alone.
According
to lead author, Nicholas J. Vogelzang, M.D., University of Chicago
Cancer Research Center, "This is the largest clinical trial ever
conducted in this disease and the 25 to 30 percent improvement in
survival for patients on the combination therapy is the first time
anyone has documented a significant improvement in patients treated for
mesothelioma."
Malignant pleural mesothelioma is associated with a history of asbestos
exposure in about 70 to 80 percent of all cases and there is no
approved or very effective chemotherapy for the disease. Researchers
hypothesized that pemetrexed might prove effective in treating this
disease because it targets key enzymes (molecules that speed up
chemical reactions in the body) thought to play a role in allowing the
rapid growth of this tumor.
Early phase I trial results in 11 patients tested with pemetrexed and cisplatin were promising and a definitive randomized
phase III trial was developed. Since there are no established therapies
for this condition, a standard chemotherapy agent called cisplatin that
has shown efficacy in treating other diseases, was used as the control group.
The phase III study initially planned to enroll 456 patients from April
1999 to March 2001. However, after enrolling 150 patients, a high rate
of severe toxicity and death was associated with the pemetrexed and
cisplatin arm of the trial. Elevated levels of homocysteine, a chemical
byproduct that results when proteins are broken down in the blood, were
found, which provided a basis for redesign of the trial to reduce the
dangerous drug side effects.
Two hundred and eighty patients were enrolled to the revised protocol.
Using a strategy to reduce drug side effects that has been successful
in the past, this new protocol added folic acid to the regimen because
pemetrexed as an antifolate agent reduces levels of this important
vitamin. Folic acid was given prior to and during the trial, and
vitamin B12 was given only during the trial. Both vitamins should boost
folic acid levels, reduce homocysteine formation, and hence reduce
toxicity to pemetrexed. "We now have a significantly less toxic regimen
than the one we started with," said Vogelzang.
Because of the
presumed importance of the vitamins to the study, the researchers
examined not only the combination therapy versus the single drug
therapy, but also looked at the results of patients on the vitamin
supplements versus those early enrollees who had not initially received
vitamins.
Standard treatment for malignant mesothelioma has
been surgery. Surgical treatment rarely results in cure and long-term
survival is unusual. Use of radiation therapy
and/or chemotherapy following surgery has not improved survival for
patients but radiation treatments may alleviate some pain associated
with the disease.
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