Metastatic Malignant Melanoma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Temodar and Sutent as Therapy for Patients With Malignant Melanoma, a Phase I/II Study
This study is designed to evaluate the safety and appropriate dose of the combination of Temodar and Sutent as first-line therapy for patients with metastatic malignant melanoma (Phase 1). Once the safety and appropriate dose is determined, additional patients will be studied at that dose to determine if there is clinical benefit as determined by the primary end-point of progression-free survival (PFS) at 6 months and additional secondary endpoints (Phase II).
Patients with unresectable metastatic melanoma have a dismal prognosis. The disease responds
poorly to currently available chemotherapies and biological agents. The median survival in
this patient population is 6 - 10 months and has not improved significantly in decades. The
FDA approved DTIC in 1975 and high dose intravenous bolus rIL-2 in 1998 and these are the
only agents approved for therapy of patients with metastatic melanoma.
In a Phase III trial reported in 2000, temozolomide (Temodar, Schering-Plough) demonstrated
equivalent overall survival to DTIC in patients with metastatic melanoma, and had the
advantages of providing improved progression-free survival, ease of administration (oral),
and crossing the blood-brain barrier. Temozolomide and DTIC are both precursors of an active
metabolite, monomethyl triazenoimidazole carboxamide (MTIC). SU11248 (Sutent, Pfizer) is a
multi-targeted receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor which targets 3 distinct vascular
endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR-1, -2, and -3), platelet-derived growth factor
receptor alpha and beta (PDGFR-α and -β), KIT receptor tyrosine kinases, and fms-related
tyrosine kinase 3/Flk2 (FLT3). Although other angiogenic factors have been identified, VEGF
is the most potent and specific regulator of angiogenesis and SU11248 targets not just one,
but all 3 VEGF signaling pathways. Dacarbazine (DTIC) causes transcriptional up-regulation
of VEGF in melanoma cells and this has been postulated as a possible mechanism of escape
from chemotherapy efficacy. Temozolomide, which acts through the same metabolite, MTIC,
would be expected to have the same activity. PDGFR-α and -β are important new targets in
tumor cell proliferation and angiogenesis. PDGF signaling pathways have been implicated in
the development and growth of solid tumors. Inhibition of PDGF receptors has been shown to
inhibit angiogenesis, tumor vascular maturation and maintenance, and tumor cell
proliferation - inducing tumor regression. In a murine model, the combination of
chemotherapy with VEGF and PDFG receptor inhibitors resulted in a remarkable survival
advantage.
The study is an open-label, single arm trial. The patient sample will be approximately 56-62
individuals, males and females 18 years of age or older with measurable metastatic melanoma.
Study participants must meet a number of laboratory criteria in order to be admitted into
the study. The study duration is expected to be approximately 2 years. Patients will be
offered treatment for up to 1 year and are expected to complete a median of 6 cycles of
treatment.
An interim analysis of safety will be conducted after completion of treatment of 6 patients
in each cohort and a determination will be made as to whether or not to continue to the next
cohort according to the specifications in the protocol. If an acceptable dosing regimen is
found, the study will proceed to a Phase II portion. Progression-free survival will be
determined for the 6 month time point when all patients have completed the study. The study
has ≥90% power to detect an increase in the 6-month progression-free survival rate from
≤15%, the result expected for patients receiving available first-line therapy, to ≥35% for
patients receiving the combination of temozolomide and SU11248, based on a one group
chi-square test with a 0.05 two-sided significance level.
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Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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