Kurz Sylvia C, Renovanz Mirjam, Bitzer Michael, Niyazi Maximilian, Malek Nisar, Tatagiba Marcos, Tabatabai Ghazaleh
Center for Personalized Medicine Tübingen, University Hospital Tübingen, Eberhard Karls University Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Center for Neuro-Oncology, Comprehensive Cancer Center Tübingen-Stuttgart, University Hospital Tübingen, Eberhard Karls University Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Neurooncol Adv. 2025 Jun 20;7(1):vdaf127. doi: 10.1093/noajnl/vdaf127. eCollection 2025 Jan-Dec.
An objective assessment of patient-centered clinical benefit derived from an anticancer therapy weighs clinical and radiographic outcome against treatment-related burden. Both, the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) and the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) have developed assessment tools to guide such evaluations. These tools, however, have not been validated for application to neuro-oncology studies.
We applied the ESMO-Magnitude of Clinical Benefit (ESMO-MCBS) v1.1. and ASCO net health benefit v2 scales to 16 neuro-oncological studies. We developed the Neuro-Oncology Magnitude of Clinical Benefit (Neuro-MCBS) scale and tested its application in select patient cohorts of MTB@ZPM (NCT03503149), a longitudinal observational study that provides comprehensive molecular profiling, consensus-guided and ranked targeted therapy recommendations and prospective assessment of clinical outcome.
Of 10 randomized phase 3 clinical trials and 6 single-arm clinical studies, 9 and 5 were scoreable by ESMO-MCBS v1.1, respectively. A score of 4 was achieved by 5 of the phase 3 and one of the single-arm studies, signifying clinical benefit. Application to these neuro-oncology studies was limited by high variability in criteria used to assess treatment response and lack of credit to therapies that lead to disease control. Based hereon, we developed the Neuro-MCBS suitable to specific needs of neuro-oncology studies and found it to be practicable and applicable to these landmark neuro-oncology studies and various treatment cohorts in MTB@ZPM.
The Neuro-MCBS is a comprehensive, clinically relevant tool and particularly suitable to assess the clinical benefit derived from novel antitumor therapies in neuro-oncology studies.
对抗癌治疗带来的以患者为中心的临床益处进行客观评估时,需要权衡临床和影像学结果与治疗相关负担。欧洲医学肿瘤学会(ESMO)和美国临床肿瘤学会(ASCO)都已开发出评估工具来指导此类评估。然而,这些工具尚未在神经肿瘤学研究中得到验证。
我们将ESMO临床获益程度(ESMO-MCBS)v1.1和ASCO净健康获益v2量表应用于16项神经肿瘤学研究。我们开发了神经肿瘤临床获益程度(Neuro-MCBS)量表,并在MTB@ZPM(NCT03503149)的特定患者队列中测试了其应用,MTB@ZPM是一项纵向观察性研究,提供全面的分子谱分析、共识指导和分级的靶向治疗建议以及临床结果的前瞻性评估。
在10项随机3期临床试验和6项单臂临床研究中,分别有9项和5项可通过ESMO-MCBS v1.1进行评分。3期研究中有5项和1项单臂研究获得了4分,表明有临床获益。这些神经肿瘤学研究的应用受到评估治疗反应所用标准的高度变异性以及对导致疾病控制的治疗缺乏认可的限制。基于此,我们开发了适用于神经肿瘤学研究特定需求的Neuro-MCBS,并发现它切实可行,适用于这些具有里程碑意义的神经肿瘤学研究以及MTB@ZPM中的各种治疗队列。
Neuro-MCBS是一种全面的、与临床相关的工具,特别适用于评估神经肿瘤学研究中新型抗肿瘤疗法带来的临床益处。