Department of Investigational Cancer Therapeutics (Phase I Clinical Trials Program), The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas.
Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, São Paulo, Brazil.
Clin Cancer Res. 2023 May 1;29(9):1708-1718. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-22-3629.
Developing new therapeutics for any of the more than 100 sarcoma subtypes presents a challenge. After progression from standard therapies, patients with sarcoma may be referred for enrollment in early-phase trials. This study aimed to investigate whether enrollment in biomarker-matched early-phase clinical trials leads to better outcomes for patients with advanced sarcoma.
In this retrospective analysis, investigational treatment characteristics and longitudinal survival outcomes were analyzed in patients with biopsy-confirmed sarcoma enrolled in early-phase trials at MD Anderson Cancer Center from May 2006 to July 2021.
Five hundred eighty-seven patients were included [405 soft tissue, 122 bone, 60 gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST); median of three prior lines of therapy]. Most common subtypes were leiomyosarcoma (17.2%), liposarcoma (14.0%), and GIST (10.2%). Molecular testing was available for 511 patients (87.1%); 221 patients (37.6%) were treated in matched trials. Overall response rate was 13.1% matched compared with 4.9% in unmatched (P < 0.001); the clinical benefit rate at 6 months was 43.9% vs. 19.9% (P < 0.001). Progression-free survival was longer for patients in matched trials (median, 5.5 vs. 2.4 months; P < 0.001), and overall survival was also superior for patients in matched trials (median, 21.5 vs. 12.3 months; P < 0.001). The benefit of enrollment in matched trials was maintained when patients with GIST were excluded from the analysis.
Enrollment in biomarker-matched early-phase trials is associated with improved outcomes in heavily pretreated patients with metastatic sarcoma. Molecular testing of tumors from patients with advanced sarcoma and enrollment in matched trials is a reasonable therapeutic strategy.
开发针对 100 多种肉瘤亚型中的任何一种的新疗法都是一项挑战。在标准疗法进展后,肉瘤患者可能会被推荐参加早期临床试验。本研究旨在调查生物标志物匹配的早期临床试验的入组是否会改善晚期肉瘤患者的结局。
在这项回顾性分析中,分析了 2006 年 5 月至 2021 年 7 月期间在 MD 安德森癌症中心参加早期临床试验的经活检证实的肉瘤患者的试验治疗特征和纵向生存结局。
共纳入 587 例患者[405 例软组织肉瘤、122 例骨肉瘤、60 例胃肠道间质瘤(GIST);中位治疗线数为 3 线]。最常见的亚型是平滑肌肉瘤(17.2%)、脂肪肉瘤(14.0%)和 GIST(10.2%)。511 例患者可进行分子检测(87.1%);221 例(37.6%)患者接受了匹配试验治疗。匹配组的总缓解率为 13.1%,而不匹配组为 4.9%(P<0.001);6 个月时的临床获益率分别为 43.9%和 19.9%(P<0.001)。匹配组的无进展生存期较长(中位数 5.5 个月比 2.4 个月;P<0.001),总生存期也较长(中位数 21.5 个月比 12.3 个月;P<0.001)。排除 GIST 患者后,匹配试验入组的获益仍然存在。
在经过大量预处理的转移性肉瘤患者中,生物标志物匹配的早期临床试验入组与改善结局相关。对晚期肉瘤患者的肿瘤进行分子检测并参加匹配试验是一种合理的治疗策略。