Epithelial Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Cisplatin Induction Followed by Paclitaxel Consolidation for the Treatment of Stage III and IV Epithelial Ovarian Cancer and Primary Peritoneal Cancer With In Vitro Correlates of Response
Clinically, there has been extensive experience with topotecan and cisplatin. Recently, several investigators have evaluated the combination of paclitaxel, cisplatin and topotecan. As expected, myelosuppression was the dose-limiting factor. Herben et al recently reported the results of a phase I trial using the combination of paclitaxel, cisplatin, and topotecan as first line therapy in advanced stage ovarian cancer. Interestingly, the authors could not achieve a dose of topotecan that would be considered "optimal" for the treatment of relapsed disease in a single-agent fashion. The inability to utilize a therapeutic dose when combined with either platinum or paclitaxel has been demonstrated in previous reports and affirms the bone marrow suppressive effect. The clinical response rate from this trial was reported as 86.7%.
Malignant neoplasms of the ovary are the cause of more deaths than any other gynecologic
cancer. Approximately 26,500 new cases are diagnosed each year in the United States, and
about 14,500 deaths occur annually as a result of this disease. Clinicians continue to be
frustrated by both the paucity of data concerning the etiologic factors in epithelial
ovarian cancer and by the failure to achieve a significant reduction in mortality over the
past several decades.
Since the introduction of cisplatin-based chemotherapy, no treatment has been shown to
improve survival in subjects with advanced ovarian cancer until the incorporation of
paclitaxel into primary therapy for this disease. In 1996, the Gynecologic Oncology Group
(GOG) published the results of a large prospective, randomized trial of cisplatin and
cyclophosphamide compared to cisplatin and paclitaxel. The cisplatin plus paclitaxel regimen
was noted to be superior based on: 1) an overall improved response rate; 2) an increased
clinical response rate (51% vs. 31%); 3) an increased rate of negative second look
laparotomies; 4) an increase in median progression free survival; and importantly 5) an
increased overall median survival (38 months vs. 24 months). The GOG results were recently
confirmed by the Canadian- European consortium randomized phase III trial (OV 10).
These large randomized trials established the combination of paclitaxel and cisplatin as the
standard, first line therapy for women with advanced ovarian cancer following cytoreductive
surgery. Although the majority of women with advanced ovarian cancer will demonstrate an
objective response to this combination; the response is generally of limited duration. The
five-year survival for advanced stage ovarian cancer is 20-40%. Consequently, there remains
a need for an improved chemotherapeutic approach in the management of ovarian cancer.
Topotecan is a semi-synthetic analog of camptothecin, a topoisomerase inhibitor. It has been
investigated in a number of phase II trials as salvage therapy for recurrent ovarian cancer.
Overall response rates have ranged from 6% to 27%. In a randomized comparative trial of
topotecan versus paclitaxel, overall response rates were 21% and 14% respectively. The
median survival for topotecan was 63 weeks as compared to 53 weeks for paclitaxel. Both
drugs demonstrated higher response rates in platinum-sensitive tumors than
platinum-resistant tumors. These data suggest that topotecan may be as active as paclitaxel,
and partially non-cross resistant with cisplatin.
Topotecan may be a better agent than paclitaxel for use in combination with cisplatin for
multiple reasons. First, Kern et al demonstrated that paclitaxel may antagonize the activity
of cisplatin. Second, topotecan has been demonstrated to be synergistic with both cisplatin
and paclitaxel in vitro. It has been demonstrated that topotecan can dramatically potentiate
the effects of platinum, perhaps by its ability to inhibit repair of platinum-DNA adducts.
Clinically, there has been extensive experience with topotecan and cisplatin. Recently,
several investigators have evaluated the combination of paclitaxel, cisplatin and topotecan.
As expected, myelosuppression was the dose-limiting factor. Herben et al recently reported
the results of a phase I trial using the combination of paclitaxel, cisplatin, and topotecan
as first line therapy in advanced stage ovarian cancer. Interestingly, the authors could not
achieve a dose of topotecan that would be considered "optimal" for the treatment of relapsed
disease in a single-agent fashion. The inability to utilize a therapeutic dose when combined
with either platinum or paclitaxel has been demonstrated in previous reports and affirms the
bone marrow suppressive effect. The clinical response rate from this trial was reported as
86.7%.
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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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