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Adjuvant chemo ups survival of patients with locally advanced bladder cancer
ORLANDO – Evidence from randomized clinical trials is all over the map, but a new study using statistical models to compare patient outcomes in a population-based cohort indicates that adjuvant chemotherapy can significantly improve overall survival in patients with locally advanced bladder cancer.
Using various propensity-score models to minimize the impact of confounding when comparing results across a large population sample, Dr. Matthew Galsky and his colleagues from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, found that adjuvant chemotherapy was associated with improvements in overall survival from 28% to 38%, compared with an observation cohort of patients who did not receive adjuvant chemotherapy.
The results, based on data from 5,653 patients with stage pT3 or greater transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder with or without positive nodes but no distant metastases, are similar to those seen in smaller meta-analyses, Dr. Galsky said at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
“In this large population-based analysis, adjuvant chemotherapy was associated with improved overall survival. The effect size was similar to that which has been reported in the meta-analyses of randomized trials, and importantly, these are data from a real-world population, perhaps providing some insights into the effectiveness of this approach,” he said.
Previously published randomized trials comparing chemotherapy regimens ranging from single-agent cisplatin to combination regimens such as MVAC (methotrexate, vincristine, doxorubicin and cisplatin) have differed in population size and outcome, with three of eight trials finding a survival benefit for adjuvant chemotherapy, but the remainder showing no benefit.
“Early trials of adjuvant chemotherapy were critical in establishing the feasibility of this approach, yet in retrospect utilized suboptimal chemotherapy regimens, were underpowered, and at times were associated with methodologic flaws. Three recent trials have compared contemporary chemotherapy regimens administered in the adjuvant setting with observation in patients with locally advanced bladder cancer post cystectomy. Unfortunately, all three of these trials closed early due to poor accrual, enrolling only 39% of the planned subjects,” Dr. Galsky said.
To overcome the problem of a lack of large randomized trials, the investigators created a population-based study of patients with pT3 and/or pN+, M0 bladder cancer who underwent radical cystectomy from 2003 through 2007. The patients, identified from the National Cancer Data Base, did not receive either neoadjuvant chemotherapy or radiation to the primary tumor. Patients who did not receive adjuvant chemotherapy and survived more than 30 days after cystectomy were chosen for the observation arm.
Minimizing bias
Propensity score matching generates the conditional probability of one individual being treated with a particular treatment approach given multiple pretreatment covariates. This method allows investigators to balance covariates between the two groups, with the goal of eliminating or minimizing treatment allocation biases that may can affect the relationship between the treatment and postoperative outcomes.
The authors used logistic regression to calculate propensity scores that represented the predicted probabilities of assignment to adjuvant chemotherapy rather than observation based on factors that included age, demographics, year of diagnosis, tumor stage, surgical margin status, lymph node density, distance to the hospital, number (volume) of cystectomies performed at the hospital, and hospital type and location.
They matched every patient assigned to adjuvant therapy to two controls from the observation group. They also created propensity score and inverse probability of treatment-weighted proportional hazard models to estimate adjusted hazard ratios for overall survival among all patients in the sample.
Finally, they conducted a sensitivity analysis to look at the impact of poor performance status on survival, and subset analyses of the effects of age, gender, and lymph node status.
A total of 5,653 patients were included in the sample, 4,360 of whom underwent observation, and 1,293 of whom received adjuvant chemotherapy.
The effect of adjuvant chemotherapy on overall survival was fairly consistent across propensity score–adjusted models. The hazard ratio for adjuvant chemotherapy in a model with stratification by performance status quintile was 0.72. In a propensity score–weighting model, looking at the inverse probability of treatment weighting, the HR was also 0.72. Finally, in a propensity score–matching model, the HR for adjuvant chemotherapy vs. observation was 0.62 (P < .0001 for all).
They found that patients who received adjuvant chemotherapy were significantly more likely to be younger, have more lymph node involvement, have higher tumor stage, positive margins, reside in the Northeast and closer to the hospital, and to have private insurance.
The findings were supported by sensitivity analyses controlling for performance status and comorbidities.
Dr. Galsky noted that the study was limited by its retrospective design, lack of details about chemotherapy, and a lack of data on recurrence or cancer-specific survival.
“Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is the preferred approach based on the available level of evidence. However, for patients who do not receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy, these data lend further support to considering adjuvant chemotherapy,” he said.
ORLANDO – Evidence from randomized clinical trials is all over the map, but a new study using statistical models to compare patient outcomes in a population-based cohort indicates that adjuvant chemotherapy can significantly improve overall survival in patients with locally advanced bladder cancer.
Using various propensity-score models to minimize the impact of confounding when comparing results across a large population sample, Dr. Matthew Galsky and his colleagues from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, found that adjuvant chemotherapy was associated with improvements in overall survival from 28% to 38%, compared with an observation cohort of patients who did not receive adjuvant chemotherapy.
The results, based on data from 5,653 patients with stage pT3 or greater transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder with or without positive nodes but no distant metastases, are similar to those seen in smaller meta-analyses, Dr. Galsky said at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
“In this large population-based analysis, adjuvant chemotherapy was associated with improved overall survival. The effect size was similar to that which has been reported in the meta-analyses of randomized trials, and importantly, these are data from a real-world population, perhaps providing some insights into the effectiveness of this approach,” he said.
Previously published randomized trials comparing chemotherapy regimens ranging from single-agent cisplatin to combination regimens such as MVAC (methotrexate, vincristine, doxorubicin and cisplatin) have differed in population size and outcome, with three of eight trials finding a survival benefit for adjuvant chemotherapy, but the remainder showing no benefit.
“Early trials of adjuvant chemotherapy were critical in establishing the feasibility of this approach, yet in retrospect utilized suboptimal chemotherapy regimens, were underpowered, and at times were associated with methodologic flaws. Three recent trials have compared contemporary chemotherapy regimens administered in the adjuvant setting with observation in patients with locally advanced bladder cancer post cystectomy. Unfortunately, all three of these trials closed early due to poor accrual, enrolling only 39% of the planned subjects,” Dr. Galsky said.
To overcome the problem of a lack of large randomized trials, the investigators created a population-based study of patients with pT3 and/or pN+, M0 bladder cancer who underwent radical cystectomy from 2003 through 2007. The patients, identified from the National Cancer Data Base, did not receive either neoadjuvant chemotherapy or radiation to the primary tumor. Patients who did not receive adjuvant chemotherapy and survived more than 30 days after cystectomy were chosen for the observation arm.
Minimizing bias
Propensity score matching generates the conditional probability of one individual being treated with a particular treatment approach given multiple pretreatment covariates. This method allows investigators to balance covariates between the two groups, with the goal of eliminating or minimizing treatment allocation biases that may can affect the relationship between the treatment and postoperative outcomes.
The authors used logistic regression to calculate propensity scores that represented the predicted probabilities of assignment to adjuvant chemotherapy rather than observation based on factors that included age, demographics, year of diagnosis, tumor stage, surgical margin status, lymph node density, distance to the hospital, number (volume) of cystectomies performed at the hospital, and hospital type and location.
They matched every patient assigned to adjuvant therapy to two controls from the observation group. They also created propensity score and inverse probability of treatment-weighted proportional hazard models to estimate adjusted hazard ratios for overall survival among all patients in the sample.
Finally, they conducted a sensitivity analysis to look at the impact of poor performance status on survival, and subset analyses of the effects of age, gender, and lymph node status.
A total of 5,653 patients were included in the sample, 4,360 of whom underwent observation, and 1,293 of whom received adjuvant chemotherapy.
The effect of adjuvant chemotherapy on overall survival was fairly consistent across propensity score–adjusted models. The hazard ratio for adjuvant chemotherapy in a model with stratification by performance status quintile was 0.72. In a propensity score–weighting model, looking at the inverse probability of treatment weighting, the HR was also 0.72. Finally, in a propensity score–matching model, the HR for adjuvant chemotherapy vs. observation was 0.62 (P < .0001 for all).
They found that patients who received adjuvant chemotherapy were significantly more likely to be younger, have more lymph node involvement, have higher tumor stage, positive margins, reside in the Northeast and closer to the hospital, and to have private insurance.
The findings were supported by sensitivity analyses controlling for performance status and comorbidities.
Dr. Galsky noted that the study was limited by its retrospective design, lack of details about chemotherapy, and a lack of data on recurrence or cancer-specific survival.
“Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is the preferred approach based on the available level of evidence. However, for patients who do not receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy, these data lend further support to considering adjuvant chemotherapy,” he said.
ORLANDO – Evidence from randomized clinical trials is all over the map, but a new study using statistical models to compare patient outcomes in a population-based cohort indicates that adjuvant chemotherapy can significantly improve overall survival in patients with locally advanced bladder cancer.
Using various propensity-score models to minimize the impact of confounding when comparing results across a large population sample, Dr. Matthew Galsky and his colleagues from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, found that adjuvant chemotherapy was associated with improvements in overall survival from 28% to 38%, compared with an observation cohort of patients who did not receive adjuvant chemotherapy.
The results, based on data from 5,653 patients with stage pT3 or greater transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder with or without positive nodes but no distant metastases, are similar to those seen in smaller meta-analyses, Dr. Galsky said at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
“In this large population-based analysis, adjuvant chemotherapy was associated with improved overall survival. The effect size was similar to that which has been reported in the meta-analyses of randomized trials, and importantly, these are data from a real-world population, perhaps providing some insights into the effectiveness of this approach,” he said.
Previously published randomized trials comparing chemotherapy regimens ranging from single-agent cisplatin to combination regimens such as MVAC (methotrexate, vincristine, doxorubicin and cisplatin) have differed in population size and outcome, with three of eight trials finding a survival benefit for adjuvant chemotherapy, but the remainder showing no benefit.
“Early trials of adjuvant chemotherapy were critical in establishing the feasibility of this approach, yet in retrospect utilized suboptimal chemotherapy regimens, were underpowered, and at times were associated with methodologic flaws. Three recent trials have compared contemporary chemotherapy regimens administered in the adjuvant setting with observation in patients with locally advanced bladder cancer post cystectomy. Unfortunately, all three of these trials closed early due to poor accrual, enrolling only 39% of the planned subjects,” Dr. Galsky said.
To overcome the problem of a lack of large randomized trials, the investigators created a population-based study of patients with pT3 and/or pN+, M0 bladder cancer who underwent radical cystectomy from 2003 through 2007. The patients, identified from the National Cancer Data Base, did not receive either neoadjuvant chemotherapy or radiation to the primary tumor. Patients who did not receive adjuvant chemotherapy and survived more than 30 days after cystectomy were chosen for the observation arm.
Minimizing bias
Propensity score matching generates the conditional probability of one individual being treated with a particular treatment approach given multiple pretreatment covariates. This method allows investigators to balance covariates between the two groups, with the goal of eliminating or minimizing treatment allocation biases that may can affect the relationship between the treatment and postoperative outcomes.
The authors used logistic regression to calculate propensity scores that represented the predicted probabilities of assignment to adjuvant chemotherapy rather than observation based on factors that included age, demographics, year of diagnosis, tumor stage, surgical margin status, lymph node density, distance to the hospital, number (volume) of cystectomies performed at the hospital, and hospital type and location.
They matched every patient assigned to adjuvant therapy to two controls from the observation group. They also created propensity score and inverse probability of treatment-weighted proportional hazard models to estimate adjusted hazard ratios for overall survival among all patients in the sample.
Finally, they conducted a sensitivity analysis to look at the impact of poor performance status on survival, and subset analyses of the effects of age, gender, and lymph node status.
A total of 5,653 patients were included in the sample, 4,360 of whom underwent observation, and 1,293 of whom received adjuvant chemotherapy.
The effect of adjuvant chemotherapy on overall survival was fairly consistent across propensity score–adjusted models. The hazard ratio for adjuvant chemotherapy in a model with stratification by performance status quintile was 0.72. In a propensity score–weighting model, looking at the inverse probability of treatment weighting, the HR was also 0.72. Finally, in a propensity score–matching model, the HR for adjuvant chemotherapy vs. observation was 0.62 (P < .0001 for all).
They found that patients who received adjuvant chemotherapy were significantly more likely to be younger, have more lymph node involvement, have higher tumor stage, positive margins, reside in the Northeast and closer to the hospital, and to have private insurance.
The findings were supported by sensitivity analyses controlling for performance status and comorbidities.
Dr. Galsky noted that the study was limited by its retrospective design, lack of details about chemotherapy, and a lack of data on recurrence or cancer-specific survival.
“Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is the preferred approach based on the available level of evidence. However, for patients who do not receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy, these data lend further support to considering adjuvant chemotherapy,” he said.
AT THE GENITOURINARY CANCERS SYMPOSIUM
Key clinical point: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is preferred, but adjuvant chemotherapy improves overall survival of locally advanced bladder cancer.
Major finding: Adjuvant chemotherapy was associated with hazard ratios favoring overall survival, compared with observation from 0.62 to 0.72.
Data source: Population-based cohort of 5,653 patients with locally advanced bladder cancer analyzed with propensity score methods.
Disclosures: The authors did not disclose the study funding source. Dr. Galsky disclosed a consulting or advisory role with Astellas, BioMotive, Dendreon, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, and Merck and receiving travel reimbursements from Astellas, BioMotiv, Dendreon, and Merck.
Adjuvant TKIs do not prevent kidney cancer recurrence
ORLANDO – Adjuvant therapy with targeted vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) inhibitors did not prolong disease-free survival or overall survival of patients with locally advanced kidney cancers, results of a randomized, controlled trial show.
Among more than 1,900 patients with advanced kidney cancer assigned to receive adjuvant therapy with the VEGF inhibitor sunitinib (Sutent), sorafenib (Nexavar) or placebo, there were no significant differences by treatment group in either disease-free survival (DFS), overall survival, or time to disease recurrence, reported Dr. Naomi B. Haas of the Abramson Cancer, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
“The findings from this study suggest that patients with locally advanced kidney cancer completely resected should not be treated with either adjuvant sorafenib or sunitinib,” she said in a media briefing prior to her presentation of the data in an oral abstract at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Approximately one-third of patients with kidney cancer may go on to develop metastatic disease, Dr. Haas noted. Because of the relative success of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) targeted to VEGF in other forms of cancer, the investigators designed a trial (ASSURE; ECOG E2805) to test two such agents in adjuvant therapy for patients with completely resected, locally advanced, nonmetastatic kidney cancer.
Following surgery, the patients were stratified by TNM stage and grade into intermediate-risk or high-risk categories, with further stratification by histologic subtype (clear cell or non–clear cell), performance status, and surgery type (open vs. laparoscopic). The patients were then randomized evenly to receive a 1-year course of either sunitinib daily 4 out of 6 weeks for 9 cycles (647 patients), sorafenib twice daily for 9 cycles (649), or placebo (647) daily.
On the advice of the data safety-monitoring committee, the starting dose of each TKI was reduced after 1,322 patients had been accrued. Too many patients were dropping out of the study due to treatment intolerance, prompting investigators to lower the starting dose of sunitinib from 50 mg to 37.5 mg daily, and the starting dose of sorafenib from 400 mg twice daily to 400 mg once daily.
Median disease-free survival, the primary endpoint, was 5.6 years in each active drug arm, compared with 5.7 years with placebo. The hazard ratios for sunitinib and sorafenib were 1.01 and 0.98, respectively, and neither was statistically significantly different from placebo.
“Patients on all three arms of the trial did better than our null hypothesis, which was approximately 4.9 years [DFS],” Dr. Haas said.
Five-year overall survival was 76.9% in the patients who had taken sunitinib, 80.7% in those who had taken sorafenib, and 78.7% in the placebo group. Again, these differences were not significant.
The most common grade 3 adverse events, all occurring in greater frequency in the TKI arms, compared with placebo, were hypertension, hand-foot reactions, rash, and fatigue.
Dr. Charles J. Ryan, who moderated the briefing but was not involved in the study commented that ECOG E2805 was “an important study, the first adjuvant study using tyrosine kinase inhibitors in kidney cancer, and the fact that it is a negative study I think in no way diminishes from the importance of it.”
“It’s important to point out that TKIs are not chemotherapy; they act in a different manner and therefore may not be as effective against micrometastatic disease as chemotherapy is in other solid tumors.”
Dr. Ryan is an ASCO Expert and professor of medicine and urology at the University of California, San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center.
ORLANDO – Adjuvant therapy with targeted vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) inhibitors did not prolong disease-free survival or overall survival of patients with locally advanced kidney cancers, results of a randomized, controlled trial show.
Among more than 1,900 patients with advanced kidney cancer assigned to receive adjuvant therapy with the VEGF inhibitor sunitinib (Sutent), sorafenib (Nexavar) or placebo, there were no significant differences by treatment group in either disease-free survival (DFS), overall survival, or time to disease recurrence, reported Dr. Naomi B. Haas of the Abramson Cancer, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
“The findings from this study suggest that patients with locally advanced kidney cancer completely resected should not be treated with either adjuvant sorafenib or sunitinib,” she said in a media briefing prior to her presentation of the data in an oral abstract at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Approximately one-third of patients with kidney cancer may go on to develop metastatic disease, Dr. Haas noted. Because of the relative success of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) targeted to VEGF in other forms of cancer, the investigators designed a trial (ASSURE; ECOG E2805) to test two such agents in adjuvant therapy for patients with completely resected, locally advanced, nonmetastatic kidney cancer.
Following surgery, the patients were stratified by TNM stage and grade into intermediate-risk or high-risk categories, with further stratification by histologic subtype (clear cell or non–clear cell), performance status, and surgery type (open vs. laparoscopic). The patients were then randomized evenly to receive a 1-year course of either sunitinib daily 4 out of 6 weeks for 9 cycles (647 patients), sorafenib twice daily for 9 cycles (649), or placebo (647) daily.
On the advice of the data safety-monitoring committee, the starting dose of each TKI was reduced after 1,322 patients had been accrued. Too many patients were dropping out of the study due to treatment intolerance, prompting investigators to lower the starting dose of sunitinib from 50 mg to 37.5 mg daily, and the starting dose of sorafenib from 400 mg twice daily to 400 mg once daily.
Median disease-free survival, the primary endpoint, was 5.6 years in each active drug arm, compared with 5.7 years with placebo. The hazard ratios for sunitinib and sorafenib were 1.01 and 0.98, respectively, and neither was statistically significantly different from placebo.
“Patients on all three arms of the trial did better than our null hypothesis, which was approximately 4.9 years [DFS],” Dr. Haas said.
Five-year overall survival was 76.9% in the patients who had taken sunitinib, 80.7% in those who had taken sorafenib, and 78.7% in the placebo group. Again, these differences were not significant.
The most common grade 3 adverse events, all occurring in greater frequency in the TKI arms, compared with placebo, were hypertension, hand-foot reactions, rash, and fatigue.
Dr. Charles J. Ryan, who moderated the briefing but was not involved in the study commented that ECOG E2805 was “an important study, the first adjuvant study using tyrosine kinase inhibitors in kidney cancer, and the fact that it is a negative study I think in no way diminishes from the importance of it.”
“It’s important to point out that TKIs are not chemotherapy; they act in a different manner and therefore may not be as effective against micrometastatic disease as chemotherapy is in other solid tumors.”
Dr. Ryan is an ASCO Expert and professor of medicine and urology at the University of California, San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center.
ORLANDO – Adjuvant therapy with targeted vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) inhibitors did not prolong disease-free survival or overall survival of patients with locally advanced kidney cancers, results of a randomized, controlled trial show.
Among more than 1,900 patients with advanced kidney cancer assigned to receive adjuvant therapy with the VEGF inhibitor sunitinib (Sutent), sorafenib (Nexavar) or placebo, there were no significant differences by treatment group in either disease-free survival (DFS), overall survival, or time to disease recurrence, reported Dr. Naomi B. Haas of the Abramson Cancer, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
“The findings from this study suggest that patients with locally advanced kidney cancer completely resected should not be treated with either adjuvant sorafenib or sunitinib,” she said in a media briefing prior to her presentation of the data in an oral abstract at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Approximately one-third of patients with kidney cancer may go on to develop metastatic disease, Dr. Haas noted. Because of the relative success of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) targeted to VEGF in other forms of cancer, the investigators designed a trial (ASSURE; ECOG E2805) to test two such agents in adjuvant therapy for patients with completely resected, locally advanced, nonmetastatic kidney cancer.
Following surgery, the patients were stratified by TNM stage and grade into intermediate-risk or high-risk categories, with further stratification by histologic subtype (clear cell or non–clear cell), performance status, and surgery type (open vs. laparoscopic). The patients were then randomized evenly to receive a 1-year course of either sunitinib daily 4 out of 6 weeks for 9 cycles (647 patients), sorafenib twice daily for 9 cycles (649), or placebo (647) daily.
On the advice of the data safety-monitoring committee, the starting dose of each TKI was reduced after 1,322 patients had been accrued. Too many patients were dropping out of the study due to treatment intolerance, prompting investigators to lower the starting dose of sunitinib from 50 mg to 37.5 mg daily, and the starting dose of sorafenib from 400 mg twice daily to 400 mg once daily.
Median disease-free survival, the primary endpoint, was 5.6 years in each active drug arm, compared with 5.7 years with placebo. The hazard ratios for sunitinib and sorafenib were 1.01 and 0.98, respectively, and neither was statistically significantly different from placebo.
“Patients on all three arms of the trial did better than our null hypothesis, which was approximately 4.9 years [DFS],” Dr. Haas said.
Five-year overall survival was 76.9% in the patients who had taken sunitinib, 80.7% in those who had taken sorafenib, and 78.7% in the placebo group. Again, these differences were not significant.
The most common grade 3 adverse events, all occurring in greater frequency in the TKI arms, compared with placebo, were hypertension, hand-foot reactions, rash, and fatigue.
Dr. Charles J. Ryan, who moderated the briefing but was not involved in the study commented that ECOG E2805 was “an important study, the first adjuvant study using tyrosine kinase inhibitors in kidney cancer, and the fact that it is a negative study I think in no way diminishes from the importance of it.”
“It’s important to point out that TKIs are not chemotherapy; they act in a different manner and therefore may not be as effective against micrometastatic disease as chemotherapy is in other solid tumors.”
Dr. Ryan is an ASCO Expert and professor of medicine and urology at the University of California, San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center.
AT THE GENITOURINARY CANCERS SYMPOSIUM
Key clinical point:. Adjuvant therapy with sorafenib or sunitinib is not recommended in patients with locally advanced kidney cancer.
Major finding: There were no significant differences in 5-year disease-free or overall survival among patients treated with sunitinib, sorafenib, or placebo.
Data source: Randomized, controlled trial (ASSURE, ECOG E2805) in 1,943 patients with completely resected locally advanced kidney cancer.
Disclosures: The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Haas disclosed a consulting or advisory role with Bristol-Myers Squibb, Merck, and GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Ryan reported financial ties with Astellas, Janssen Oncology, Bayer, Millennium, BIND Karyopharm, and Novartis.
BCG/sunitinib combo produces high complete response rate in NMIBC
ORLANDO – A combination of intravesical bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) followed by sunitinib produced high complete response rates in patients with high-risk, non–muscle invasive bladder cancer.
In a phase II trial, 26 of 36 patients (72%) with non–muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) had a complete response following bladder installation of BCG and consolidation therapy with sunitinib (Sutent), reported Dr. Alexander M. Helfand of the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center, Ann Arbor.
“Adding sunitinib after BCG induction may result in increased rates of complete response at 3 months over those of BCG alone. The durability of response appears promising, given a 77% 2-year recurrence in high-risk patients with non–muscle invasive bladder cancer,” he said at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
“Certainly, this study provides the rationale to consider antiangiogenic therapy in the non–muscle invasive setting,” said Dr. Jonathan E. Rosenberg of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, the invited discussant.
Induction and maintenance therapy with BCG is the mainstay of initial treatment of high-risk NMIBC. It has been associated in clinical studies with 3-month complete response rates ranging from 28% to 85%, 5-year cumulative recurrence rates from 50% to 55%, 5-year cumulative progression rates of 8%-20%, and a 10-year disease-specific mortality rate of 4%-25%, Dr. Helfand noted.
“Complete response to BCG at 3 months has been shown to predict future recurrence-free status. Consolidating the initial tumor response to BCG with adjunctive therapies may help improve outcomes,” he said.
BCG downregulates vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptors, and sunitinib binds to VEGF receptors to prevent vascular growth.
To see whether the combined therapies could act synergistically, investigators treated patients with 6-weeks of BCG induction beginning within 6 weeks of diagnostic or restaging biopsy, followed by a 2-week hiatus, then 28 days of oral sunitinib 50 mg/day. Patients with a complete response at 3 months went on to BCG maintenance, while those with an incomplete response or recurrence at 3 months went on to a second cycle of BCG followed by sunitinib. Patients with disease progression after either treatment cycle were treated with alternative therapies at the treating clinician’s discretion.
A total of 36 of 39 patients completed BCG induction and at least one dose of sunitinib, and these patients were included in the efficacy analysis. The safety analysis was by intention to treat, and therefore included all 39 patients.
The complete response rate at 3 months after cycle one, the primary endpoint, was 73% (26 of 36 patients). Of the responders, 73% have started on BCG maintenance, 23% had no maintenance BCG and no evidence of disease at last follow-up, and the remaining 4% had cystectomies.
Of the 28% (10 patients) with residual disease at 3 months, four underwent cystectomy, two had Ta low-grade recurrences which were managed with repeat resection, and two elected a second BCG induction/sunitinib cycle.
There were a total of 127 adverse events deemed to be minor among 34 patients, and 6 major adverse events occurring in 5 patients. The major events included rash on hands and feet, hand and foot syndrome, thrombocytopenia, febrile diarrhea, sores on hands and feet, and reactivation of herpes zoster.
In all, 13 patients required some delay of sunitinib therapy, primarily due to jaundice/elevated liver enzymes or thrombocytopenia. All adverse events disappeared at the end of therapy.
Of the 31 patients with an intact bladder, 2 years recurrence-free survival was 77%, and 2-year progression-free survival was 100%.
Dr. Rosenberg, the discussant, noted that overall “the results look quite good. Toxicity and tolerability, though, do make me concerned, and future trials might consider dose reduction [of sunitinib] at the start to 37.5 mg to actually increase the number of patients and time on therapy.”
ORLANDO – A combination of intravesical bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) followed by sunitinib produced high complete response rates in patients with high-risk, non–muscle invasive bladder cancer.
In a phase II trial, 26 of 36 patients (72%) with non–muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) had a complete response following bladder installation of BCG and consolidation therapy with sunitinib (Sutent), reported Dr. Alexander M. Helfand of the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center, Ann Arbor.
“Adding sunitinib after BCG induction may result in increased rates of complete response at 3 months over those of BCG alone. The durability of response appears promising, given a 77% 2-year recurrence in high-risk patients with non–muscle invasive bladder cancer,” he said at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
“Certainly, this study provides the rationale to consider antiangiogenic therapy in the non–muscle invasive setting,” said Dr. Jonathan E. Rosenberg of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, the invited discussant.
Induction and maintenance therapy with BCG is the mainstay of initial treatment of high-risk NMIBC. It has been associated in clinical studies with 3-month complete response rates ranging from 28% to 85%, 5-year cumulative recurrence rates from 50% to 55%, 5-year cumulative progression rates of 8%-20%, and a 10-year disease-specific mortality rate of 4%-25%, Dr. Helfand noted.
“Complete response to BCG at 3 months has been shown to predict future recurrence-free status. Consolidating the initial tumor response to BCG with adjunctive therapies may help improve outcomes,” he said.
BCG downregulates vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptors, and sunitinib binds to VEGF receptors to prevent vascular growth.
To see whether the combined therapies could act synergistically, investigators treated patients with 6-weeks of BCG induction beginning within 6 weeks of diagnostic or restaging biopsy, followed by a 2-week hiatus, then 28 days of oral sunitinib 50 mg/day. Patients with a complete response at 3 months went on to BCG maintenance, while those with an incomplete response or recurrence at 3 months went on to a second cycle of BCG followed by sunitinib. Patients with disease progression after either treatment cycle were treated with alternative therapies at the treating clinician’s discretion.
A total of 36 of 39 patients completed BCG induction and at least one dose of sunitinib, and these patients were included in the efficacy analysis. The safety analysis was by intention to treat, and therefore included all 39 patients.
The complete response rate at 3 months after cycle one, the primary endpoint, was 73% (26 of 36 patients). Of the responders, 73% have started on BCG maintenance, 23% had no maintenance BCG and no evidence of disease at last follow-up, and the remaining 4% had cystectomies.
Of the 28% (10 patients) with residual disease at 3 months, four underwent cystectomy, two had Ta low-grade recurrences which were managed with repeat resection, and two elected a second BCG induction/sunitinib cycle.
There were a total of 127 adverse events deemed to be minor among 34 patients, and 6 major adverse events occurring in 5 patients. The major events included rash on hands and feet, hand and foot syndrome, thrombocytopenia, febrile diarrhea, sores on hands and feet, and reactivation of herpes zoster.
In all, 13 patients required some delay of sunitinib therapy, primarily due to jaundice/elevated liver enzymes or thrombocytopenia. All adverse events disappeared at the end of therapy.
Of the 31 patients with an intact bladder, 2 years recurrence-free survival was 77%, and 2-year progression-free survival was 100%.
Dr. Rosenberg, the discussant, noted that overall “the results look quite good. Toxicity and tolerability, though, do make me concerned, and future trials might consider dose reduction [of sunitinib] at the start to 37.5 mg to actually increase the number of patients and time on therapy.”
ORLANDO – A combination of intravesical bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) followed by sunitinib produced high complete response rates in patients with high-risk, non–muscle invasive bladder cancer.
In a phase II trial, 26 of 36 patients (72%) with non–muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) had a complete response following bladder installation of BCG and consolidation therapy with sunitinib (Sutent), reported Dr. Alexander M. Helfand of the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center, Ann Arbor.
“Adding sunitinib after BCG induction may result in increased rates of complete response at 3 months over those of BCG alone. The durability of response appears promising, given a 77% 2-year recurrence in high-risk patients with non–muscle invasive bladder cancer,” he said at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
“Certainly, this study provides the rationale to consider antiangiogenic therapy in the non–muscle invasive setting,” said Dr. Jonathan E. Rosenberg of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, the invited discussant.
Induction and maintenance therapy with BCG is the mainstay of initial treatment of high-risk NMIBC. It has been associated in clinical studies with 3-month complete response rates ranging from 28% to 85%, 5-year cumulative recurrence rates from 50% to 55%, 5-year cumulative progression rates of 8%-20%, and a 10-year disease-specific mortality rate of 4%-25%, Dr. Helfand noted.
“Complete response to BCG at 3 months has been shown to predict future recurrence-free status. Consolidating the initial tumor response to BCG with adjunctive therapies may help improve outcomes,” he said.
BCG downregulates vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptors, and sunitinib binds to VEGF receptors to prevent vascular growth.
To see whether the combined therapies could act synergistically, investigators treated patients with 6-weeks of BCG induction beginning within 6 weeks of diagnostic or restaging biopsy, followed by a 2-week hiatus, then 28 days of oral sunitinib 50 mg/day. Patients with a complete response at 3 months went on to BCG maintenance, while those with an incomplete response or recurrence at 3 months went on to a second cycle of BCG followed by sunitinib. Patients with disease progression after either treatment cycle were treated with alternative therapies at the treating clinician’s discretion.
A total of 36 of 39 patients completed BCG induction and at least one dose of sunitinib, and these patients were included in the efficacy analysis. The safety analysis was by intention to treat, and therefore included all 39 patients.
The complete response rate at 3 months after cycle one, the primary endpoint, was 73% (26 of 36 patients). Of the responders, 73% have started on BCG maintenance, 23% had no maintenance BCG and no evidence of disease at last follow-up, and the remaining 4% had cystectomies.
Of the 28% (10 patients) with residual disease at 3 months, four underwent cystectomy, two had Ta low-grade recurrences which were managed with repeat resection, and two elected a second BCG induction/sunitinib cycle.
There were a total of 127 adverse events deemed to be minor among 34 patients, and 6 major adverse events occurring in 5 patients. The major events included rash on hands and feet, hand and foot syndrome, thrombocytopenia, febrile diarrhea, sores on hands and feet, and reactivation of herpes zoster.
In all, 13 patients required some delay of sunitinib therapy, primarily due to jaundice/elevated liver enzymes or thrombocytopenia. All adverse events disappeared at the end of therapy.
Of the 31 patients with an intact bladder, 2 years recurrence-free survival was 77%, and 2-year progression-free survival was 100%.
Dr. Rosenberg, the discussant, noted that overall “the results look quite good. Toxicity and tolerability, though, do make me concerned, and future trials might consider dose reduction [of sunitinib] at the start to 37.5 mg to actually increase the number of patients and time on therapy.”
Key clinical point: Following BCG induction with sunitinib improves 3 month response rates in non–muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) over BCG alone.
Major finding: The complete response rate at 3 months was 72% for patients with NMIBC treated with the BCG/sunitinib combination.
Data source: Phase II open-label trial in 39 patients with non–muscle invasive bladder cancer.
Disclosures: The trial was funded by Pfizer. Dr. Helfand reported having no conflict of interest disclosures. Dr. Rosenberg reported having financial ties with multiple companies, but not with Pfizer.
Bladder cancer ‘no longer one single disease’
ORLANDO – Gene expression profiling can identify intrinsic bladder cancer subtypes, predict the clinical response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and serve as a decision aid for selecting treatments for individual patients, evidence from a phase II trial suggests.
Among 60 bladder cancer patients scheduled for treatment with conventional neoadjuvant therapy plus bevacizumab(Avastin), a prognostic gene expression profile performed prior to chemotherapy accurately classified tumors into a basal subtype that is chemosensitive, a p53-like subtype that is chemoresistant and prone to bone metastasis, and a luminal subtype that retains some chemosensitivity and may respond to therapy with a fibroblast growth factor inhibitor, reported Dr. Arlene O. Siefker-Radtke of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.
“The time has come for us to no longer think of bladder cancer as one single disease. Application of these biomarkers will fundamentally change how we treat bladder cancer,” she said at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Her group had previously found evidence to suggest that bladder cancer can be divided into the following three intrinsic subtypes:
• Basal, the most highly proliferative type with historically, the worst clinical outcomes.
• Luminal, with intermediate markers of proliferation and enrichment for the fibroblast growth factor receptor 3.
• P53-like, with the lowest levels of proliferation and highest expression of stromal markers.
In the current study, the investigators performed gene-expression profiling on tissues from transurethral resections (from 38 patients) and cystectomy specimens (from 23 patients ) from patients enrolled in a phase II trial of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with dose-dense methotrexate, vincristine, doxorubicin and cisplatin (ddMVAC). They also performed profiling on a validation sample from 49 patients treated with perioperative MVAC in a previous clinical trial.
In an analysis of overall survival among patients who had undergone transurethral resection they found that 5-year OS was 91% for the 11 patients with the basal tumor subtype, 73% for 11 patients with the luminal subtype, and 36% for those with the p53-like subtype (P = .015).
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy altered the natural course of the basal subtype, Dr. Siefker-Radtke said, noting that among chemonaive patients with this subtype in previous studies, the 5-year OS was just 30%.
The investigators hypothesized that the highly proliferative basal subtype would more susceptible to DNA-damaging agents, a supposition supported by evidence from tumor downstaging studies, They found that 45% of basal tumors were downstaged to pT0N0, compared with 36% of luminal tumors, and 25% of p53-like tumors. The differences were not statistically significant, however, because of the small sample size.
They also found that bone metastases were associated exclusively with the p53-like subtype, with 56% of patients with this tumor type developing bone metastases within 2 years of their initial diagnosis.
To validate their findings, the authors applied gene expression profiling to samples from 49 patients enrolled treated with MVAC in 2001. Here, too, they found that the basal subtype was associated with better survival, with a 5-year OS of 77%, compared with 56% each for the luminal and p53-like subtypes (P = .021).
“We found that a prognostic gene-expression profile that had been previously reported in chemonaive patients was now predictive for clinical outcomes in the setting of neoadjuvant-based chemotherapy with dose-dense MVAC. Use of gene expression profiling in determining subtype may help select the appropriate group of patients for neoadjuvant chemotherapy. I think this also shows the impact of aggressive chemotherapy on a highly proliferative basal subtype,” Dr. Siefker-Radtke said.
“The p53-like group was associated with chemoresistance and bone metastases, and I think that this subtype might select for patients who would benefit from agents inhibiting stromal interactions, and also reflect a group of patients who might benefit from initial surgery,” she added.
ORLANDO – Gene expression profiling can identify intrinsic bladder cancer subtypes, predict the clinical response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and serve as a decision aid for selecting treatments for individual patients, evidence from a phase II trial suggests.
Among 60 bladder cancer patients scheduled for treatment with conventional neoadjuvant therapy plus bevacizumab(Avastin), a prognostic gene expression profile performed prior to chemotherapy accurately classified tumors into a basal subtype that is chemosensitive, a p53-like subtype that is chemoresistant and prone to bone metastasis, and a luminal subtype that retains some chemosensitivity and may respond to therapy with a fibroblast growth factor inhibitor, reported Dr. Arlene O. Siefker-Radtke of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.
“The time has come for us to no longer think of bladder cancer as one single disease. Application of these biomarkers will fundamentally change how we treat bladder cancer,” she said at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Her group had previously found evidence to suggest that bladder cancer can be divided into the following three intrinsic subtypes:
• Basal, the most highly proliferative type with historically, the worst clinical outcomes.
• Luminal, with intermediate markers of proliferation and enrichment for the fibroblast growth factor receptor 3.
• P53-like, with the lowest levels of proliferation and highest expression of stromal markers.
In the current study, the investigators performed gene-expression profiling on tissues from transurethral resections (from 38 patients) and cystectomy specimens (from 23 patients ) from patients enrolled in a phase II trial of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with dose-dense methotrexate, vincristine, doxorubicin and cisplatin (ddMVAC). They also performed profiling on a validation sample from 49 patients treated with perioperative MVAC in a previous clinical trial.
In an analysis of overall survival among patients who had undergone transurethral resection they found that 5-year OS was 91% for the 11 patients with the basal tumor subtype, 73% for 11 patients with the luminal subtype, and 36% for those with the p53-like subtype (P = .015).
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy altered the natural course of the basal subtype, Dr. Siefker-Radtke said, noting that among chemonaive patients with this subtype in previous studies, the 5-year OS was just 30%.
The investigators hypothesized that the highly proliferative basal subtype would more susceptible to DNA-damaging agents, a supposition supported by evidence from tumor downstaging studies, They found that 45% of basal tumors were downstaged to pT0N0, compared with 36% of luminal tumors, and 25% of p53-like tumors. The differences were not statistically significant, however, because of the small sample size.
They also found that bone metastases were associated exclusively with the p53-like subtype, with 56% of patients with this tumor type developing bone metastases within 2 years of their initial diagnosis.
To validate their findings, the authors applied gene expression profiling to samples from 49 patients enrolled treated with MVAC in 2001. Here, too, they found that the basal subtype was associated with better survival, with a 5-year OS of 77%, compared with 56% each for the luminal and p53-like subtypes (P = .021).
“We found that a prognostic gene-expression profile that had been previously reported in chemonaive patients was now predictive for clinical outcomes in the setting of neoadjuvant-based chemotherapy with dose-dense MVAC. Use of gene expression profiling in determining subtype may help select the appropriate group of patients for neoadjuvant chemotherapy. I think this also shows the impact of aggressive chemotherapy on a highly proliferative basal subtype,” Dr. Siefker-Radtke said.
“The p53-like group was associated with chemoresistance and bone metastases, and I think that this subtype might select for patients who would benefit from agents inhibiting stromal interactions, and also reflect a group of patients who might benefit from initial surgery,” she added.
ORLANDO – Gene expression profiling can identify intrinsic bladder cancer subtypes, predict the clinical response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and serve as a decision aid for selecting treatments for individual patients, evidence from a phase II trial suggests.
Among 60 bladder cancer patients scheduled for treatment with conventional neoadjuvant therapy plus bevacizumab(Avastin), a prognostic gene expression profile performed prior to chemotherapy accurately classified tumors into a basal subtype that is chemosensitive, a p53-like subtype that is chemoresistant and prone to bone metastasis, and a luminal subtype that retains some chemosensitivity and may respond to therapy with a fibroblast growth factor inhibitor, reported Dr. Arlene O. Siefker-Radtke of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.
“The time has come for us to no longer think of bladder cancer as one single disease. Application of these biomarkers will fundamentally change how we treat bladder cancer,” she said at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Her group had previously found evidence to suggest that bladder cancer can be divided into the following three intrinsic subtypes:
• Basal, the most highly proliferative type with historically, the worst clinical outcomes.
• Luminal, with intermediate markers of proliferation and enrichment for the fibroblast growth factor receptor 3.
• P53-like, with the lowest levels of proliferation and highest expression of stromal markers.
In the current study, the investigators performed gene-expression profiling on tissues from transurethral resections (from 38 patients) and cystectomy specimens (from 23 patients ) from patients enrolled in a phase II trial of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with dose-dense methotrexate, vincristine, doxorubicin and cisplatin (ddMVAC). They also performed profiling on a validation sample from 49 patients treated with perioperative MVAC in a previous clinical trial.
In an analysis of overall survival among patients who had undergone transurethral resection they found that 5-year OS was 91% for the 11 patients with the basal tumor subtype, 73% for 11 patients with the luminal subtype, and 36% for those with the p53-like subtype (P = .015).
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy altered the natural course of the basal subtype, Dr. Siefker-Radtke said, noting that among chemonaive patients with this subtype in previous studies, the 5-year OS was just 30%.
The investigators hypothesized that the highly proliferative basal subtype would more susceptible to DNA-damaging agents, a supposition supported by evidence from tumor downstaging studies, They found that 45% of basal tumors were downstaged to pT0N0, compared with 36% of luminal tumors, and 25% of p53-like tumors. The differences were not statistically significant, however, because of the small sample size.
They also found that bone metastases were associated exclusively with the p53-like subtype, with 56% of patients with this tumor type developing bone metastases within 2 years of their initial diagnosis.
To validate their findings, the authors applied gene expression profiling to samples from 49 patients enrolled treated with MVAC in 2001. Here, too, they found that the basal subtype was associated with better survival, with a 5-year OS of 77%, compared with 56% each for the luminal and p53-like subtypes (P = .021).
“We found that a prognostic gene-expression profile that had been previously reported in chemonaive patients was now predictive for clinical outcomes in the setting of neoadjuvant-based chemotherapy with dose-dense MVAC. Use of gene expression profiling in determining subtype may help select the appropriate group of patients for neoadjuvant chemotherapy. I think this also shows the impact of aggressive chemotherapy on a highly proliferative basal subtype,” Dr. Siefker-Radtke said.
“The p53-like group was associated with chemoresistance and bone metastases, and I think that this subtype might select for patients who would benefit from agents inhibiting stromal interactions, and also reflect a group of patients who might benefit from initial surgery,” she added.
AT THE GENITOURINARY CANCERS SYMPOSIUM
Key clinical point: Gene expression profiling can predict clinical responses to neoadjuvant chemotherapy for bladder cancer.
Major finding:A prognostic gene expression profile performed prior to chemotherapy accurately classified tumors into a basal subtype that is chemosensitive, a p53-like subtype that is chemoresistant and prone to bone metastasis and a luminal subtype that retains some chemosensitivity and may respond to therapy with a fibroblast growth factor inhibitor.
Data source:Gene expression profiling data from a prospective clinical trial with 60 patients and a validation cohort of 49 patients with bladder cancer treated with chemotherapy.
Disclosures: The study was supported by Genentech. Dr. Siefker-Radtke disclosed receiving research funding from the company.
Taxanes retain efficacy against mCRPC resistant to AR-antagonists
ORLANDO – The variant, labeled AR-47, is a truncated form of the androgen receptor that is missing the ligand-binding domain, to which both androgens and androgen receptor inhibitors such as abiraterone (Zytiga) and enzalutamide (Xtandi) normally bind. AR-V7 has been detected in about one-third of men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC).
But a study of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from 37 men with mCRPC shows that patients whose tumor cells are positive for AR-V7 retain their sensitivity to taxanes.
“In this particular study, there was a 41% response rate to taxanes if a man was AR-V7-positive, compared to a 0% response to abiraterone or enzalutamide in this setting,” said Dr. Emmanuel S. Antonarakis from the Johns Hopkins Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, Baltimore,
Dr. Antonarakis presented the study in a briefing prior to its presentation in a poster session at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Testing for the presence of AR-V7 could in the future help guide clinicians when choosing therapies for men with mCRPC, Dr. Antonarakis said.
The investigators used a quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) assay to detect and quantify levels of AR-V7 in the CTCs of 37 men with mCRPC who were scheduled to start taxane-based chemotherapy with docetaxel (Taxotere) or cabazitaxel (Jevtana).
For the primary endpoint of a prostate specific antigen (PSA) response, they found that 7 of 17 men (41%) who were positive for AR-V7 had a response to taxane therapy, compared with 13 of 20 (65%) of men with the wild type of the androgen receptor (that is, AR-V7 negative). The difference in response rates between AR-V7-positive and -negative men was not significant.
When they included data from an earlier study of 62 men treated with abiraterone or enzalutamide, the investigators found that AR-V7-positive men had significantly better progression-free survival when treated with taxanes, compared with androgen receptor antagonists. The hazard ratio (HR) for PFS with taxanes was 0.21 (P = .003). In contrast, PFS was similar for AR-V7-negative men treated with either taxanes or abiraterone/enzalutamide.
“AR-V7 may potentially serve as a treatment selection marker for men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer seeking therapy with either taxanes or enzalutamide/abiraterone. However, before the data become clinically actionable, we need to prospectively validate this finding in at least one multicenter clinical trial,” Dr. Antonarakis said.
He noted that there is currently no commercial assay for AR-V7.
ORLANDO – The variant, labeled AR-47, is a truncated form of the androgen receptor that is missing the ligand-binding domain, to which both androgens and androgen receptor inhibitors such as abiraterone (Zytiga) and enzalutamide (Xtandi) normally bind. AR-V7 has been detected in about one-third of men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC).
But a study of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from 37 men with mCRPC shows that patients whose tumor cells are positive for AR-V7 retain their sensitivity to taxanes.
“In this particular study, there was a 41% response rate to taxanes if a man was AR-V7-positive, compared to a 0% response to abiraterone or enzalutamide in this setting,” said Dr. Emmanuel S. Antonarakis from the Johns Hopkins Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, Baltimore,
Dr. Antonarakis presented the study in a briefing prior to its presentation in a poster session at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Testing for the presence of AR-V7 could in the future help guide clinicians when choosing therapies for men with mCRPC, Dr. Antonarakis said.
The investigators used a quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) assay to detect and quantify levels of AR-V7 in the CTCs of 37 men with mCRPC who were scheduled to start taxane-based chemotherapy with docetaxel (Taxotere) or cabazitaxel (Jevtana).
For the primary endpoint of a prostate specific antigen (PSA) response, they found that 7 of 17 men (41%) who were positive for AR-V7 had a response to taxane therapy, compared with 13 of 20 (65%) of men with the wild type of the androgen receptor (that is, AR-V7 negative). The difference in response rates between AR-V7-positive and -negative men was not significant.
When they included data from an earlier study of 62 men treated with abiraterone or enzalutamide, the investigators found that AR-V7-positive men had significantly better progression-free survival when treated with taxanes, compared with androgen receptor antagonists. The hazard ratio (HR) for PFS with taxanes was 0.21 (P = .003). In contrast, PFS was similar for AR-V7-negative men treated with either taxanes or abiraterone/enzalutamide.
“AR-V7 may potentially serve as a treatment selection marker for men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer seeking therapy with either taxanes or enzalutamide/abiraterone. However, before the data become clinically actionable, we need to prospectively validate this finding in at least one multicenter clinical trial,” Dr. Antonarakis said.
He noted that there is currently no commercial assay for AR-V7.
ORLANDO – The variant, labeled AR-47, is a truncated form of the androgen receptor that is missing the ligand-binding domain, to which both androgens and androgen receptor inhibitors such as abiraterone (Zytiga) and enzalutamide (Xtandi) normally bind. AR-V7 has been detected in about one-third of men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC).
But a study of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from 37 men with mCRPC shows that patients whose tumor cells are positive for AR-V7 retain their sensitivity to taxanes.
“In this particular study, there was a 41% response rate to taxanes if a man was AR-V7-positive, compared to a 0% response to abiraterone or enzalutamide in this setting,” said Dr. Emmanuel S. Antonarakis from the Johns Hopkins Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, Baltimore,
Dr. Antonarakis presented the study in a briefing prior to its presentation in a poster session at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Testing for the presence of AR-V7 could in the future help guide clinicians when choosing therapies for men with mCRPC, Dr. Antonarakis said.
The investigators used a quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) assay to detect and quantify levels of AR-V7 in the CTCs of 37 men with mCRPC who were scheduled to start taxane-based chemotherapy with docetaxel (Taxotere) or cabazitaxel (Jevtana).
For the primary endpoint of a prostate specific antigen (PSA) response, they found that 7 of 17 men (41%) who were positive for AR-V7 had a response to taxane therapy, compared with 13 of 20 (65%) of men with the wild type of the androgen receptor (that is, AR-V7 negative). The difference in response rates between AR-V7-positive and -negative men was not significant.
When they included data from an earlier study of 62 men treated with abiraterone or enzalutamide, the investigators found that AR-V7-positive men had significantly better progression-free survival when treated with taxanes, compared with androgen receptor antagonists. The hazard ratio (HR) for PFS with taxanes was 0.21 (P = .003). In contrast, PFS was similar for AR-V7-negative men treated with either taxanes or abiraterone/enzalutamide.
“AR-V7 may potentially serve as a treatment selection marker for men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer seeking therapy with either taxanes or enzalutamide/abiraterone. However, before the data become clinically actionable, we need to prospectively validate this finding in at least one multicenter clinical trial,” Dr. Antonarakis said.
He noted that there is currently no commercial assay for AR-V7.
AT THE GENITOURINARY CANCERS SYMPOSIUM
Key clinical point: The AR-V7 variant appears to confer resistance to abiraterone and enzalutamide, but not to taxanes.
Major finding: There was no significant difference in PSA response rates to taxanes among men who were positive or negative for the AR-V7 variant.
Data source: Study of 37 men with mCRPC treated with taxanes, and 62 treated with androgen receptor antagonists.
Disclosures: The study was supported by the Prostate Cancer Foundation. Dr. Antonarakis disclosed a consulting or advisory role with Sanofi, Dendreon, and Medivation, as well as travel, accommodations, and expenses, and honoraria from Sanofi, Dendreon, and Medivation.
Testicular cancer history ups risk for higher-risk prostate cancer
ORLANDO – Men with a history of testicular cancer are at higher risk for prostate cancer than men with a history of melanoma, and testicular cancer survivors also tend to have a higher incidence of higher-grade disease, investigators report.
A study of data on more than 32,000 men with a history of testicular cancer showed a cumulative incidence of prostate cancer by age 80 years of 12.6%, compared with 2.8% among more than 147,000 controls – men with a history of melanoma (P < .0001).
The incidence of intermediate- to high-risk prostate cancers was also higher among testicular cancer survivors, with a cumulative incidence by age 80 years of 5.8%, compared with 1.1% for controls (P < .0001), reported Dr. Mohummad Minhaj Siddiqui, director of urologic robotic surgery at the University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore.
“Based on these findings, we believe that men with history of testicular cancer should consider discussing the risks and benefits of prostate cancer screening with their physicians,” he said at a briefing prior to his presentation of the data in a scientific poster session at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
“Further validation studies are needed to confirm these results, we believe, based on other cohorts, and to determine if men with a history of testicular cancer should have closer screening for prostate cancer in some other way,” he added.
Dr. Charles J. Ryan, who moderated the briefing but was not involved in the study, commented that the investigators corrected for prior radiation therapy in men with testicular cancer, suggesting that the data provide a good estimation of the actual risk.
Dr. Ryan is an ASCO Expert and is with the departments of medicine and urology at the University of California, San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Dr. Siddiqui and his colleagues combed through Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) data to identify 32,435 men with a history of testicular cancer, including all subtypes.
They chose 147,044 men with a history of melanoma for the control group, because there is no known association between melanoma and prostate cancer risk.
They looked at data on men aged 40 years and older to allow for sufficient age at which prostate cancer might be diagnosed, and looked at the rate of all prostate cancer as well as intermediate-risk (Gleason score of 7), and high-risk cancers (Gleason score 8 or higher).
“We looked at alternate risk factors, such as age, race, and radiation history, and found that even when controlling for the influence of these risk factors, there was still an increased risk of developing intermediate- to high-risk prostate cancer in men with a history of testicular cancer as opposed to the control population,” Dr. Siddiqui said.
He emphasized, however, that despite the elevated risk for intermediate- to high-grade prostate cancer among testicular cancer survivors, the overall risk is relatively low; 95% of men with a history of testicular cancer will never get prostate cancer, he said.
ORLANDO – Men with a history of testicular cancer are at higher risk for prostate cancer than men with a history of melanoma, and testicular cancer survivors also tend to have a higher incidence of higher-grade disease, investigators report.
A study of data on more than 32,000 men with a history of testicular cancer showed a cumulative incidence of prostate cancer by age 80 years of 12.6%, compared with 2.8% among more than 147,000 controls – men with a history of melanoma (P < .0001).
The incidence of intermediate- to high-risk prostate cancers was also higher among testicular cancer survivors, with a cumulative incidence by age 80 years of 5.8%, compared with 1.1% for controls (P < .0001), reported Dr. Mohummad Minhaj Siddiqui, director of urologic robotic surgery at the University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore.
“Based on these findings, we believe that men with history of testicular cancer should consider discussing the risks and benefits of prostate cancer screening with their physicians,” he said at a briefing prior to his presentation of the data in a scientific poster session at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
“Further validation studies are needed to confirm these results, we believe, based on other cohorts, and to determine if men with a history of testicular cancer should have closer screening for prostate cancer in some other way,” he added.
Dr. Charles J. Ryan, who moderated the briefing but was not involved in the study, commented that the investigators corrected for prior radiation therapy in men with testicular cancer, suggesting that the data provide a good estimation of the actual risk.
Dr. Ryan is an ASCO Expert and is with the departments of medicine and urology at the University of California, San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Dr. Siddiqui and his colleagues combed through Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) data to identify 32,435 men with a history of testicular cancer, including all subtypes.
They chose 147,044 men with a history of melanoma for the control group, because there is no known association between melanoma and prostate cancer risk.
They looked at data on men aged 40 years and older to allow for sufficient age at which prostate cancer might be diagnosed, and looked at the rate of all prostate cancer as well as intermediate-risk (Gleason score of 7), and high-risk cancers (Gleason score 8 or higher).
“We looked at alternate risk factors, such as age, race, and radiation history, and found that even when controlling for the influence of these risk factors, there was still an increased risk of developing intermediate- to high-risk prostate cancer in men with a history of testicular cancer as opposed to the control population,” Dr. Siddiqui said.
He emphasized, however, that despite the elevated risk for intermediate- to high-grade prostate cancer among testicular cancer survivors, the overall risk is relatively low; 95% of men with a history of testicular cancer will never get prostate cancer, he said.
ORLANDO – Men with a history of testicular cancer are at higher risk for prostate cancer than men with a history of melanoma, and testicular cancer survivors also tend to have a higher incidence of higher-grade disease, investigators report.
A study of data on more than 32,000 men with a history of testicular cancer showed a cumulative incidence of prostate cancer by age 80 years of 12.6%, compared with 2.8% among more than 147,000 controls – men with a history of melanoma (P < .0001).
The incidence of intermediate- to high-risk prostate cancers was also higher among testicular cancer survivors, with a cumulative incidence by age 80 years of 5.8%, compared with 1.1% for controls (P < .0001), reported Dr. Mohummad Minhaj Siddiqui, director of urologic robotic surgery at the University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore.
“Based on these findings, we believe that men with history of testicular cancer should consider discussing the risks and benefits of prostate cancer screening with their physicians,” he said at a briefing prior to his presentation of the data in a scientific poster session at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
“Further validation studies are needed to confirm these results, we believe, based on other cohorts, and to determine if men with a history of testicular cancer should have closer screening for prostate cancer in some other way,” he added.
Dr. Charles J. Ryan, who moderated the briefing but was not involved in the study, commented that the investigators corrected for prior radiation therapy in men with testicular cancer, suggesting that the data provide a good estimation of the actual risk.
Dr. Ryan is an ASCO Expert and is with the departments of medicine and urology at the University of California, San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Dr. Siddiqui and his colleagues combed through Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) data to identify 32,435 men with a history of testicular cancer, including all subtypes.
They chose 147,044 men with a history of melanoma for the control group, because there is no known association between melanoma and prostate cancer risk.
They looked at data on men aged 40 years and older to allow for sufficient age at which prostate cancer might be diagnosed, and looked at the rate of all prostate cancer as well as intermediate-risk (Gleason score of 7), and high-risk cancers (Gleason score 8 or higher).
“We looked at alternate risk factors, such as age, race, and radiation history, and found that even when controlling for the influence of these risk factors, there was still an increased risk of developing intermediate- to high-risk prostate cancer in men with a history of testicular cancer as opposed to the control population,” Dr. Siddiqui said.
He emphasized, however, that despite the elevated risk for intermediate- to high-grade prostate cancer among testicular cancer survivors, the overall risk is relatively low; 95% of men with a history of testicular cancer will never get prostate cancer, he said.
AT THE GENITOURINARY CANCERS SYMPOSIUM
Key clinical point: A history of testicular cancer appears to be a risk factor for intermediate- to high-risk prostate cancer.
Major finding: Men with a history of testicular cancer had a cumulative incidence of prostate cancer by age 80 years of 12.6%, compared with 2.8% among more than 147,000 controls.
Data source: Retrospective data review on 32,435 men with a history of testicular and 147,044 controls with a history of melanoma.
Disclosures: The investigators did not disclose a funding source. Dr. Siddiqui and Dr. Ryan reported no relevant disclosures.
Bicalutamide improves OS in locally advanced prostate cancer
ORLANDO – Bicalutamide significantly improved overall survival of men with locally advanced, nonmetastatic prostate cancer, but offered no additional benefit for men with localized disease, investigators reported.
Long-term follow-up results from the randomized controlled Scandinavian Prostate Cancer Group 6 study show that after a median follow-up of 14.6 years, men with locally advanced disease who received 150 mg bicalutamide (Casodex) daily in addition to standard care had significantly better overall survival (OS) than did men with locally advanced disease who received a placebo (hazard ratio 0.77, P =. 01), reported Dr. Frederic Birkabaek Thomsen of Rigshopitalet at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
In contrast, men with localized disease had no benefit from bicalutamide (HR 1.19, P = .056).
“There was an even distribution between prostate cancer–specific mortality in both patients with localized and locally advanced disease. However, in patients with localized disease, there was an increase in other-cause mortality of patients randomized to bicalutamide. In contrast, in locally advanced disease, there was a slight increase in other-cause mortality in patients randomized to placebo, Dr. Thomsen said at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
The current analysis builds on earlier findings from the study. In 2006, the investigators reported that after a median 7.1 years of follow-up, bicalutamide in patients with locally advanced disease significantly improved both progression-free survival (HR 0.47; P < .001) and overall survival (HR 0.65, P = .001).
The study enrolled 1,218 patients; 607 were assigned to bicalutamide, 611 to placebo. The groups were well matched by median age (70 years in each group), median prostate-specific antigen (PSA; 13.8 and 12.6 ng/mL, respectively), and tumor grade and disease stage.
In each treatment arm, at least 89% of patients were managed with watchful waiting, about 12% had radical prostatectomy, and 4%-6% had radiation with external beam or brachytherapy.
In the cohort as a whole, there was no difference between treatment arms in overall survival at 14.6 years’ median follow-up. But when the results were stratified by clinical tumor stage, there was, as noted above, a significant survival advantage from bicalutamide among patients with locally advanced disease.
An analysis stratifying survival by tumor stage and baseline PSA suggested that bicalutamide was most effective in men with locally advanced cancer and more extensive disease at baseline, with a nonsignificant hazard ratio of 0.87 for those with a baseline PSA around 10 ng/mL, compared with 0.76 (P = .015) for men with a baseline PSA hovering around 30 ng/mL.
Dr. Thomsen noted that although other studies from the United States and Europe have failed to show a benefit of bicalutamide in patients with locally advanced prostate cancer, patients in other trials received bicalutamide as an adjuvant to radical prostatectomy or radiation, whereas the majority of patients in the Scandinavian trial were managed with observation alone. Patients in the trial were also younger and tended to have more advanced disease than patients in other trials, which may explain the bicalutamide benefit they saw, he added.
Dr. Thomsen presented the findings in an oral abstract session and scientific poster session.
ORLANDO – Bicalutamide significantly improved overall survival of men with locally advanced, nonmetastatic prostate cancer, but offered no additional benefit for men with localized disease, investigators reported.
Long-term follow-up results from the randomized controlled Scandinavian Prostate Cancer Group 6 study show that after a median follow-up of 14.6 years, men with locally advanced disease who received 150 mg bicalutamide (Casodex) daily in addition to standard care had significantly better overall survival (OS) than did men with locally advanced disease who received a placebo (hazard ratio 0.77, P =. 01), reported Dr. Frederic Birkabaek Thomsen of Rigshopitalet at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
In contrast, men with localized disease had no benefit from bicalutamide (HR 1.19, P = .056).
“There was an even distribution between prostate cancer–specific mortality in both patients with localized and locally advanced disease. However, in patients with localized disease, there was an increase in other-cause mortality of patients randomized to bicalutamide. In contrast, in locally advanced disease, there was a slight increase in other-cause mortality in patients randomized to placebo, Dr. Thomsen said at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
The current analysis builds on earlier findings from the study. In 2006, the investigators reported that after a median 7.1 years of follow-up, bicalutamide in patients with locally advanced disease significantly improved both progression-free survival (HR 0.47; P < .001) and overall survival (HR 0.65, P = .001).
The study enrolled 1,218 patients; 607 were assigned to bicalutamide, 611 to placebo. The groups were well matched by median age (70 years in each group), median prostate-specific antigen (PSA; 13.8 and 12.6 ng/mL, respectively), and tumor grade and disease stage.
In each treatment arm, at least 89% of patients were managed with watchful waiting, about 12% had radical prostatectomy, and 4%-6% had radiation with external beam or brachytherapy.
In the cohort as a whole, there was no difference between treatment arms in overall survival at 14.6 years’ median follow-up. But when the results were stratified by clinical tumor stage, there was, as noted above, a significant survival advantage from bicalutamide among patients with locally advanced disease.
An analysis stratifying survival by tumor stage and baseline PSA suggested that bicalutamide was most effective in men with locally advanced cancer and more extensive disease at baseline, with a nonsignificant hazard ratio of 0.87 for those with a baseline PSA around 10 ng/mL, compared with 0.76 (P = .015) for men with a baseline PSA hovering around 30 ng/mL.
Dr. Thomsen noted that although other studies from the United States and Europe have failed to show a benefit of bicalutamide in patients with locally advanced prostate cancer, patients in other trials received bicalutamide as an adjuvant to radical prostatectomy or radiation, whereas the majority of patients in the Scandinavian trial were managed with observation alone. Patients in the trial were also younger and tended to have more advanced disease than patients in other trials, which may explain the bicalutamide benefit they saw, he added.
Dr. Thomsen presented the findings in an oral abstract session and scientific poster session.
ORLANDO – Bicalutamide significantly improved overall survival of men with locally advanced, nonmetastatic prostate cancer, but offered no additional benefit for men with localized disease, investigators reported.
Long-term follow-up results from the randomized controlled Scandinavian Prostate Cancer Group 6 study show that after a median follow-up of 14.6 years, men with locally advanced disease who received 150 mg bicalutamide (Casodex) daily in addition to standard care had significantly better overall survival (OS) than did men with locally advanced disease who received a placebo (hazard ratio 0.77, P =. 01), reported Dr. Frederic Birkabaek Thomsen of Rigshopitalet at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
In contrast, men with localized disease had no benefit from bicalutamide (HR 1.19, P = .056).
“There was an even distribution between prostate cancer–specific mortality in both patients with localized and locally advanced disease. However, in patients with localized disease, there was an increase in other-cause mortality of patients randomized to bicalutamide. In contrast, in locally advanced disease, there was a slight increase in other-cause mortality in patients randomized to placebo, Dr. Thomsen said at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
The current analysis builds on earlier findings from the study. In 2006, the investigators reported that after a median 7.1 years of follow-up, bicalutamide in patients with locally advanced disease significantly improved both progression-free survival (HR 0.47; P < .001) and overall survival (HR 0.65, P = .001).
The study enrolled 1,218 patients; 607 were assigned to bicalutamide, 611 to placebo. The groups were well matched by median age (70 years in each group), median prostate-specific antigen (PSA; 13.8 and 12.6 ng/mL, respectively), and tumor grade and disease stage.
In each treatment arm, at least 89% of patients were managed with watchful waiting, about 12% had radical prostatectomy, and 4%-6% had radiation with external beam or brachytherapy.
In the cohort as a whole, there was no difference between treatment arms in overall survival at 14.6 years’ median follow-up. But when the results were stratified by clinical tumor stage, there was, as noted above, a significant survival advantage from bicalutamide among patients with locally advanced disease.
An analysis stratifying survival by tumor stage and baseline PSA suggested that bicalutamide was most effective in men with locally advanced cancer and more extensive disease at baseline, with a nonsignificant hazard ratio of 0.87 for those with a baseline PSA around 10 ng/mL, compared with 0.76 (P = .015) for men with a baseline PSA hovering around 30 ng/mL.
Dr. Thomsen noted that although other studies from the United States and Europe have failed to show a benefit of bicalutamide in patients with locally advanced prostate cancer, patients in other trials received bicalutamide as an adjuvant to radical prostatectomy or radiation, whereas the majority of patients in the Scandinavian trial were managed with observation alone. Patients in the trial were also younger and tended to have more advanced disease than patients in other trials, which may explain the bicalutamide benefit they saw, he added.
Dr. Thomsen presented the findings in an oral abstract session and scientific poster session.
AT THE GENITOURINARY CANCERS SYMPOSIUM
Key clinical point: Bicalutamide improved overall survival in men with locally advanced but not organ-confined prostate cancer.
Major finding: After a median follow-up of 14.6 years, men with locally advanced disease who received 150 mg bicalutamide (Casodex) daily in addition to standard care had significantly better overall survival than did men with locally advanced disease who received a placebo (hazard ratio 0.77, P =. 01).
Data source: Randomized, controlled, double-blinded trial of 1,218 men with nonmetastatic prostate cancer.
Disclosures: AstraZeneca sponsored the study. Dr. Thomsen reported having no conflicts of interest.
Active surveillance linked to greater risk of death in intermediate-risk prostate cancer
Active surveillance may not be the best option for patients diagnosed with intermediate-risk prostate cancer, results of a prospective study suggest.
Among 945 men managed with active surveillance, the risk of dying from prostate cancer within 15 years of diagnosis was nearly fourfold higher for those with an initial diagnosis of intermediate-risk disease than for those with low-risk disease.
“What surprised us was that their actually seemed to be a greater risk of dying of prostate cancer for patients diagnosed with intermediate risk disease and placed on surveillance,” said Dr. Andrew Loblaw, a radiation oncologist at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto.
“When we actually stratify it by patients in the low-risk category, we see that [active surveillance] is a very safe and reasonable approach, and appropriate in our minds for low-risk patients, in line with the guideline recommendations. But despite the selection factors that we use in our clinic for intermediate-risk patients, we’re still seeing, at least in this analysis, greater risk of dying from prostate cancer, and we think that more research is needed to better identify the group of patients that may be watched conservatively,” he said in a media briefing held covering studies to be presented later at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium, jointly sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), American Society of Clinical Radiology (ASTRO), and Society of Urologic Oncology (SUO).
Dr. Charles J. Ryan, who moderated the briefing but was not involved in the study said that the findings are provocative.
“There are a number of things that we don’t know from these data. For example, did some of these patients who were on active surveillance go on to receive local therapy later, what were the subsequent therapies they received for metastatic disease, et cetera. But it is an important point to state the fact that some patients with intermediate risk do in fact die of prostate cancer,” said Dr. Ryan, an ASCO Expert with the departments of medicine and urology at the University of California, San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Ontario guidelines: ‘Preferred strategy’
Cancer Care Ontario guidelines for the management of low-risk prostate cancer state that “for patients with low-risk (Gleason score ≤ 6) localized prostate cancer, active surveillance is the preferred disease management strategy.”
In the United States, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) recommends active surveillance as an alternative to radiation or surgery in the management of men with low-risk prostate cancer and a life expectancy of 10 years or more. Active surveillance is not, however, recommended for men with intermediate-risk disease.
To see whether there were significant differences in outcomes between patients with conservatively managed low- or intermediate-risk disease, the investigators looked at prospectively collected data on 945 men managed with active surveillance at their center from 1995 through 2013. Of this group, 237 had been diagnosed with intermediate-risk disease, defined as a prostate-specific androgen (PSA) level greater than 10, Gleason score of 7, or clinical stage T2b/2c.
Patients were offered intervention if they had a PSA doubling time of less than 3 years, a change in Gleason score, or clinical disease progression.
The authors found that 10-year overall survival (OS) was 67.3% for patients with intermediate risk, compared with 84.2% for those with low-risk disease, and the respective 15-year OS rates were 50.8% vs. 66.7% (hazard ratio, 2.13; P < .0001).
When they looked at cause-specific survival (CSS) rates, they also found significant differences, with a 10-year CSS for intermediate-risk patients of 97.2%, compared with 98.3% for low-risk patients, and 15-year CSS rates of 88.5% vs. 96.7% (HR, 3.74; P = .01).
The investigators concluded that “active surveillance for intermediate-risk prostate cancer has significantly lower overall survival and cause-specific survival, compared with low-risk patients, and therefore extreme caution should be exercised if it were to be implemented in intermediate-risk patients.”
The data are scheduled for presentation in a poster session at the symposium.
Active surveillance may not be the best option for patients diagnosed with intermediate-risk prostate cancer, results of a prospective study suggest.
Among 945 men managed with active surveillance, the risk of dying from prostate cancer within 15 years of diagnosis was nearly fourfold higher for those with an initial diagnosis of intermediate-risk disease than for those with low-risk disease.
“What surprised us was that their actually seemed to be a greater risk of dying of prostate cancer for patients diagnosed with intermediate risk disease and placed on surveillance,” said Dr. Andrew Loblaw, a radiation oncologist at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto.
“When we actually stratify it by patients in the low-risk category, we see that [active surveillance] is a very safe and reasonable approach, and appropriate in our minds for low-risk patients, in line with the guideline recommendations. But despite the selection factors that we use in our clinic for intermediate-risk patients, we’re still seeing, at least in this analysis, greater risk of dying from prostate cancer, and we think that more research is needed to better identify the group of patients that may be watched conservatively,” he said in a media briefing held covering studies to be presented later at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium, jointly sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), American Society of Clinical Radiology (ASTRO), and Society of Urologic Oncology (SUO).
Dr. Charles J. Ryan, who moderated the briefing but was not involved in the study said that the findings are provocative.
“There are a number of things that we don’t know from these data. For example, did some of these patients who were on active surveillance go on to receive local therapy later, what were the subsequent therapies they received for metastatic disease, et cetera. But it is an important point to state the fact that some patients with intermediate risk do in fact die of prostate cancer,” said Dr. Ryan, an ASCO Expert with the departments of medicine and urology at the University of California, San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Ontario guidelines: ‘Preferred strategy’
Cancer Care Ontario guidelines for the management of low-risk prostate cancer state that “for patients with low-risk (Gleason score ≤ 6) localized prostate cancer, active surveillance is the preferred disease management strategy.”
In the United States, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) recommends active surveillance as an alternative to radiation or surgery in the management of men with low-risk prostate cancer and a life expectancy of 10 years or more. Active surveillance is not, however, recommended for men with intermediate-risk disease.
To see whether there were significant differences in outcomes between patients with conservatively managed low- or intermediate-risk disease, the investigators looked at prospectively collected data on 945 men managed with active surveillance at their center from 1995 through 2013. Of this group, 237 had been diagnosed with intermediate-risk disease, defined as a prostate-specific androgen (PSA) level greater than 10, Gleason score of 7, or clinical stage T2b/2c.
Patients were offered intervention if they had a PSA doubling time of less than 3 years, a change in Gleason score, or clinical disease progression.
The authors found that 10-year overall survival (OS) was 67.3% for patients with intermediate risk, compared with 84.2% for those with low-risk disease, and the respective 15-year OS rates were 50.8% vs. 66.7% (hazard ratio, 2.13; P < .0001).
When they looked at cause-specific survival (CSS) rates, they also found significant differences, with a 10-year CSS for intermediate-risk patients of 97.2%, compared with 98.3% for low-risk patients, and 15-year CSS rates of 88.5% vs. 96.7% (HR, 3.74; P = .01).
The investigators concluded that “active surveillance for intermediate-risk prostate cancer has significantly lower overall survival and cause-specific survival, compared with low-risk patients, and therefore extreme caution should be exercised if it were to be implemented in intermediate-risk patients.”
The data are scheduled for presentation in a poster session at the symposium.
Active surveillance may not be the best option for patients diagnosed with intermediate-risk prostate cancer, results of a prospective study suggest.
Among 945 men managed with active surveillance, the risk of dying from prostate cancer within 15 years of diagnosis was nearly fourfold higher for those with an initial diagnosis of intermediate-risk disease than for those with low-risk disease.
“What surprised us was that their actually seemed to be a greater risk of dying of prostate cancer for patients diagnosed with intermediate risk disease and placed on surveillance,” said Dr. Andrew Loblaw, a radiation oncologist at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto.
“When we actually stratify it by patients in the low-risk category, we see that [active surveillance] is a very safe and reasonable approach, and appropriate in our minds for low-risk patients, in line with the guideline recommendations. But despite the selection factors that we use in our clinic for intermediate-risk patients, we’re still seeing, at least in this analysis, greater risk of dying from prostate cancer, and we think that more research is needed to better identify the group of patients that may be watched conservatively,” he said in a media briefing held covering studies to be presented later at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium, jointly sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), American Society of Clinical Radiology (ASTRO), and Society of Urologic Oncology (SUO).
Dr. Charles J. Ryan, who moderated the briefing but was not involved in the study said that the findings are provocative.
“There are a number of things that we don’t know from these data. For example, did some of these patients who were on active surveillance go on to receive local therapy later, what were the subsequent therapies they received for metastatic disease, et cetera. But it is an important point to state the fact that some patients with intermediate risk do in fact die of prostate cancer,” said Dr. Ryan, an ASCO Expert with the departments of medicine and urology at the University of California, San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Ontario guidelines: ‘Preferred strategy’
Cancer Care Ontario guidelines for the management of low-risk prostate cancer state that “for patients with low-risk (Gleason score ≤ 6) localized prostate cancer, active surveillance is the preferred disease management strategy.”
In the United States, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) recommends active surveillance as an alternative to radiation or surgery in the management of men with low-risk prostate cancer and a life expectancy of 10 years or more. Active surveillance is not, however, recommended for men with intermediate-risk disease.
To see whether there were significant differences in outcomes between patients with conservatively managed low- or intermediate-risk disease, the investigators looked at prospectively collected data on 945 men managed with active surveillance at their center from 1995 through 2013. Of this group, 237 had been diagnosed with intermediate-risk disease, defined as a prostate-specific androgen (PSA) level greater than 10, Gleason score of 7, or clinical stage T2b/2c.
Patients were offered intervention if they had a PSA doubling time of less than 3 years, a change in Gleason score, or clinical disease progression.
The authors found that 10-year overall survival (OS) was 67.3% for patients with intermediate risk, compared with 84.2% for those with low-risk disease, and the respective 15-year OS rates were 50.8% vs. 66.7% (hazard ratio, 2.13; P < .0001).
When they looked at cause-specific survival (CSS) rates, they also found significant differences, with a 10-year CSS for intermediate-risk patients of 97.2%, compared with 98.3% for low-risk patients, and 15-year CSS rates of 88.5% vs. 96.7% (HR, 3.74; P = .01).
The investigators concluded that “active surveillance for intermediate-risk prostate cancer has significantly lower overall survival and cause-specific survival, compared with low-risk patients, and therefore extreme caution should be exercised if it were to be implemented in intermediate-risk patients.”
The data are scheduled for presentation in a poster session at the symposium.
Key clinical point: Active surveillance may not be appropriate for management of intermediate-risk prostate cancer.
Major finding: Men with intermediate-risk disease had a hazard ratio of 3.75 for prostate cancer death, compared with men with low-risk disease.
Data source: Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data on 945 men with prostate cancer managed with active surveillance.
Disclosures: The study was supported by the Prostate Cancer Research Foundation (now Prostate Cancer Canada) and internal funding from Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre. Dr. Loblaw reported no conflict of interest.
Residents reluctant to recommend DNR to patients
BOSTON – Medical residents in the United States appear to understand that cardiopulmonary resuscitation or intubation is highly unlikely to benefit patients with advanced cancers at the end of life, but the majority of residents surveyed said that they do not discuss code-status options or potentially beneficial palliative care with their dying patients.
“This was primarily due to residents’ perceptions of patient autonomy: Residents wanted patients to make their own decisions, without any influence from the doctor, which misses the concept of informed decision making. These incomplete discussions can cause at minimum improper documentation of patients’ wishes, and at most psychological harm, damage to the physician-patient relationship, and the potential for unwanted attempts at resuscitation,” said Dr. David J. Einstein, a resident at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Tufts Medical Center, both in Boston.
Despite their reluctance to have the discussion, however, the majority of residents said they preferred to discuss code status with patients themselves rather than hand it off to the attending physician, primarily out of a sense that it is their responsibility as physicians.
Yet these physicians in training did not seem to feel that they were also responsible for providing guidance to patients, Dr. Einstein said at the Palliative Care in Oncology Symposium.
“We felt that this represented an unmet need in training and practice. Residents and attendings should be providing guidance on all medical interventions, including CPR, and if they aren’t sure what to recommend, then they themselves should be seeking guidance from other experts, before asking a patient to falsely choose between an intervention and death,” he said.
The first discussion of code status – do not resuscitate (DNR) or do not intubate (DNI) – may occur in the hospital, and is often left to a resident physician. Ideally, the physician and patient should discuss the patient’s prognosis, goals for care, evaluation of CPR as a means of meeting those goals, and a recommendation.
But many residents lack training in the end-of-life discussion, which can have a significant impact on the quality of the patients’ remaining weeks or months of life.
Nationwide survey
Dr. Einstein and his colleagues conducted a nationwide survey to measure the likelihood that residents would discuss prognostic information and offer recommendations to patients with limited life expectancy. They also sought to determine why residents might be reluctant to provide discussion, and to evaluate their satisfaction with code-status discussions that both they and their attending physicians have conducted.
The survey presented respondents with a hypothetical case of a patient with stage IV adenocarcinoma of the lung metastatic to the brain. The patient, who has disease progression despite receiving first- and second-line therapy, presents to the emergency department with dyspnea and is slightly hypoxemic, but is not in distress. The patient has not previously established a code-status preference.
The investigators contacted 387 residency program directors by mail, 19 of whom agreed to participate and responded. They sent surveys to a total of 1,627 residents, 358 of which were completed and included.
The investigators found that slightly less than half of the respondents said they would share information with the patient about his/her prognosis and the relative benefit of CPR, and more than two-thirds said they would be unlikely to offer a specific recommendation.
“So even in the situation with a clearly declining patient, residents were as likely as not to provide the information needed to make an informed decision, and were far less likely to provide guidance on this decision,” Dr. Einstein said.
Asked the reason for their decisions, 69% of the residents who would not offer a recommendation said that the patient should make his/her own decision without any influence, and 26.5% said that the attending would not want them to offer a recommendation. Nonetheless, only 1.3% of this group said they believed that CPR would offer the patient a reasonable chance of resuscitation.
The majority of respondents who would offer a recommendation (93.5%) said they would recommend DNR and DNI.
Code-status talk a ‘responsibility’
When they were asked whether they would prefer the attending to discuss code status, nearly 70% of respondents disagreed.
Of those residents who said they preferred to retain the code-status discussion, 93.4% said they thought it was part of their responsibility as a physician, and 65.8% said they thought they had sufficient training and knowledge to do it. A minority in this group (2.5%) said that they would be likely to disagree with the attending’s estimate of prognosis, and 4.9% said they thought the attending would not share his/her estimate honestly.
When the authors asked about the residents’ general satisfaction with discussion of code status, “we learned two things: One, the residents are significantly more satisfied with their own discussions than their attendings’ discussions; and two, there is a substantial minority that is dissatisfied with all discussions, and a small number who are actually very satisfied,” Dr. Einstein said.
In a linear regression analysis testing for hypothesized correlations, the investigators found that more-senior residents were more likely to share prognostic information and make recommendations (P = .002). Residents who expressed an interest in hematology/oncology or palliative care specialization were also more likely to offer prognostic information, but not to make a recommendation about code status.
More-senior year of training correlated negatively with satisfaction with both the resident’s own and the attending’s discussion of code status.
“We found substantial dissatisfaction with code-status discussions in general, and we hypothesize that this is due to an internal conflict. When a resident knows that an intervention may be more harmful than beneficial, but thinks that the patient should make their own decision alone, then one may experience substantial frustration, and this would increase as training goes on and one becomes more sure of the outcomes of interventions like CPR,” Dr. Einstein said.
Generation gap
Evoking a potential generation gap between old-school doctors and the up-and-coming young physicians who by statute work fewer hours than their mentors had to, “I’m struck that [residents] don’t trust the attendings. When I was a resident, you didn’t do anything without asking the attending,” said Dr. Michael H. Levy, an invited discussant who is vice chair of medical oncology and director of the pain and palliative care program at Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia.
“I’m glad that the residents want to do it, but they have the same arrogance/ignorance that they don’t know how, so if we want them to do it, we have to train them,” he said. The symposium was cosponsored by AAHPM, ASCO, ASTRO, and MASCC. The study was supported in part by the Conquer Cancer Foundation. Dr. Einstein and Dr. Levy reported having no relevant disclosures.
Can you imagine a health care system where your treating physician cannot offer their patients information on code-status and end of life decisions? Seems somewhat preposterous, but in a national survey in the United States, more than two-thirds of medical residents said they would not offer end-of-life code-status prognostic information and recommendations to their patients with limited life expectancy. Granted that medical residents thought that invasive interventions in an individual with limited life expectancy were not warranted; they wanted patients to make these decisions on their own without influence from health care professionals. Although patient autonomy is one of the pillars in medical ethics, decisions made without undue influence should be made with the most accurate information at hand.
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| Dr. Laura Drudi |
In vascular surgery, specialists are performing moderate- to high-risk interventions on an exponentially growing elderly population plagued with a significant cardiovascular disease burden. It is therefore essential that physicians, where appropriate, discuss end-of-life and code status with their patients. In my experience, surgical residents are inexperienced when it comes to having these dialogues with patients largely because there are no teaching opportunities to learn these communication skills. Further, there are few opportunities to learn by observing these sensitive discussions that are often performed out of earshot. Currently, there is an unmet need in training programs when it comes to providing appropriate guidance to residents who may need to have these difficult discussions.
It is our responsibility as medical professionals to provide the best medical as well as end of life care. Residents who are appropriately trained to participate in code- status discussions and end-of-life decisions will enable our patients to make well-advised and truly autonomous decisions about their ultimate care.
Dr. Laura Drudi is the resident medical editor for Vascular Specialist.
Can you imagine a health care system where your treating physician cannot offer their patients information on code-status and end of life decisions? Seems somewhat preposterous, but in a national survey in the United States, more than two-thirds of medical residents said they would not offer end-of-life code-status prognostic information and recommendations to their patients with limited life expectancy. Granted that medical residents thought that invasive interventions in an individual with limited life expectancy were not warranted; they wanted patients to make these decisions on their own without influence from health care professionals. Although patient autonomy is one of the pillars in medical ethics, decisions made without undue influence should be made with the most accurate information at hand.
|
| Dr. Laura Drudi |
In vascular surgery, specialists are performing moderate- to high-risk interventions on an exponentially growing elderly population plagued with a significant cardiovascular disease burden. It is therefore essential that physicians, where appropriate, discuss end-of-life and code status with their patients. In my experience, surgical residents are inexperienced when it comes to having these dialogues with patients largely because there are no teaching opportunities to learn these communication skills. Further, there are few opportunities to learn by observing these sensitive discussions that are often performed out of earshot. Currently, there is an unmet need in training programs when it comes to providing appropriate guidance to residents who may need to have these difficult discussions.
It is our responsibility as medical professionals to provide the best medical as well as end of life care. Residents who are appropriately trained to participate in code- status discussions and end-of-life decisions will enable our patients to make well-advised and truly autonomous decisions about their ultimate care.
Dr. Laura Drudi is the resident medical editor for Vascular Specialist.
Can you imagine a health care system where your treating physician cannot offer their patients information on code-status and end of life decisions? Seems somewhat preposterous, but in a national survey in the United States, more than two-thirds of medical residents said they would not offer end-of-life code-status prognostic information and recommendations to their patients with limited life expectancy. Granted that medical residents thought that invasive interventions in an individual with limited life expectancy were not warranted; they wanted patients to make these decisions on their own without influence from health care professionals. Although patient autonomy is one of the pillars in medical ethics, decisions made without undue influence should be made with the most accurate information at hand.
|
| Dr. Laura Drudi |
In vascular surgery, specialists are performing moderate- to high-risk interventions on an exponentially growing elderly population plagued with a significant cardiovascular disease burden. It is therefore essential that physicians, where appropriate, discuss end-of-life and code status with their patients. In my experience, surgical residents are inexperienced when it comes to having these dialogues with patients largely because there are no teaching opportunities to learn these communication skills. Further, there are few opportunities to learn by observing these sensitive discussions that are often performed out of earshot. Currently, there is an unmet need in training programs when it comes to providing appropriate guidance to residents who may need to have these difficult discussions.
It is our responsibility as medical professionals to provide the best medical as well as end of life care. Residents who are appropriately trained to participate in code- status discussions and end-of-life decisions will enable our patients to make well-advised and truly autonomous decisions about their ultimate care.
Dr. Laura Drudi is the resident medical editor for Vascular Specialist.
BOSTON – Medical residents in the United States appear to understand that cardiopulmonary resuscitation or intubation is highly unlikely to benefit patients with advanced cancers at the end of life, but the majority of residents surveyed said that they do not discuss code-status options or potentially beneficial palliative care with their dying patients.
“This was primarily due to residents’ perceptions of patient autonomy: Residents wanted patients to make their own decisions, without any influence from the doctor, which misses the concept of informed decision making. These incomplete discussions can cause at minimum improper documentation of patients’ wishes, and at most psychological harm, damage to the physician-patient relationship, and the potential for unwanted attempts at resuscitation,” said Dr. David J. Einstein, a resident at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Tufts Medical Center, both in Boston.
Despite their reluctance to have the discussion, however, the majority of residents said they preferred to discuss code status with patients themselves rather than hand it off to the attending physician, primarily out of a sense that it is their responsibility as physicians.
Yet these physicians in training did not seem to feel that they were also responsible for providing guidance to patients, Dr. Einstein said at the Palliative Care in Oncology Symposium.
“We felt that this represented an unmet need in training and practice. Residents and attendings should be providing guidance on all medical interventions, including CPR, and if they aren’t sure what to recommend, then they themselves should be seeking guidance from other experts, before asking a patient to falsely choose between an intervention and death,” he said.
The first discussion of code status – do not resuscitate (DNR) or do not intubate (DNI) – may occur in the hospital, and is often left to a resident physician. Ideally, the physician and patient should discuss the patient’s prognosis, goals for care, evaluation of CPR as a means of meeting those goals, and a recommendation.
But many residents lack training in the end-of-life discussion, which can have a significant impact on the quality of the patients’ remaining weeks or months of life.
Nationwide survey
Dr. Einstein and his colleagues conducted a nationwide survey to measure the likelihood that residents would discuss prognostic information and offer recommendations to patients with limited life expectancy. They also sought to determine why residents might be reluctant to provide discussion, and to evaluate their satisfaction with code-status discussions that both they and their attending physicians have conducted.
The survey presented respondents with a hypothetical case of a patient with stage IV adenocarcinoma of the lung metastatic to the brain. The patient, who has disease progression despite receiving first- and second-line therapy, presents to the emergency department with dyspnea and is slightly hypoxemic, but is not in distress. The patient has not previously established a code-status preference.
The investigators contacted 387 residency program directors by mail, 19 of whom agreed to participate and responded. They sent surveys to a total of 1,627 residents, 358 of which were completed and included.
The investigators found that slightly less than half of the respondents said they would share information with the patient about his/her prognosis and the relative benefit of CPR, and more than two-thirds said they would be unlikely to offer a specific recommendation.
“So even in the situation with a clearly declining patient, residents were as likely as not to provide the information needed to make an informed decision, and were far less likely to provide guidance on this decision,” Dr. Einstein said.
Asked the reason for their decisions, 69% of the residents who would not offer a recommendation said that the patient should make his/her own decision without any influence, and 26.5% said that the attending would not want them to offer a recommendation. Nonetheless, only 1.3% of this group said they believed that CPR would offer the patient a reasonable chance of resuscitation.
The majority of respondents who would offer a recommendation (93.5%) said they would recommend DNR and DNI.
Code-status talk a ‘responsibility’
When they were asked whether they would prefer the attending to discuss code status, nearly 70% of respondents disagreed.
Of those residents who said they preferred to retain the code-status discussion, 93.4% said they thought it was part of their responsibility as a physician, and 65.8% said they thought they had sufficient training and knowledge to do it. A minority in this group (2.5%) said that they would be likely to disagree with the attending’s estimate of prognosis, and 4.9% said they thought the attending would not share his/her estimate honestly.
When the authors asked about the residents’ general satisfaction with discussion of code status, “we learned two things: One, the residents are significantly more satisfied with their own discussions than their attendings’ discussions; and two, there is a substantial minority that is dissatisfied with all discussions, and a small number who are actually very satisfied,” Dr. Einstein said.
In a linear regression analysis testing for hypothesized correlations, the investigators found that more-senior residents were more likely to share prognostic information and make recommendations (P = .002). Residents who expressed an interest in hematology/oncology or palliative care specialization were also more likely to offer prognostic information, but not to make a recommendation about code status.
More-senior year of training correlated negatively with satisfaction with both the resident’s own and the attending’s discussion of code status.
“We found substantial dissatisfaction with code-status discussions in general, and we hypothesize that this is due to an internal conflict. When a resident knows that an intervention may be more harmful than beneficial, but thinks that the patient should make their own decision alone, then one may experience substantial frustration, and this would increase as training goes on and one becomes more sure of the outcomes of interventions like CPR,” Dr. Einstein said.
Generation gap
Evoking a potential generation gap between old-school doctors and the up-and-coming young physicians who by statute work fewer hours than their mentors had to, “I’m struck that [residents] don’t trust the attendings. When I was a resident, you didn’t do anything without asking the attending,” said Dr. Michael H. Levy, an invited discussant who is vice chair of medical oncology and director of the pain and palliative care program at Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia.
“I’m glad that the residents want to do it, but they have the same arrogance/ignorance that they don’t know how, so if we want them to do it, we have to train them,” he said. The symposium was cosponsored by AAHPM, ASCO, ASTRO, and MASCC. The study was supported in part by the Conquer Cancer Foundation. Dr. Einstein and Dr. Levy reported having no relevant disclosures.
BOSTON – Medical residents in the United States appear to understand that cardiopulmonary resuscitation or intubation is highly unlikely to benefit patients with advanced cancers at the end of life, but the majority of residents surveyed said that they do not discuss code-status options or potentially beneficial palliative care with their dying patients.
“This was primarily due to residents’ perceptions of patient autonomy: Residents wanted patients to make their own decisions, without any influence from the doctor, which misses the concept of informed decision making. These incomplete discussions can cause at minimum improper documentation of patients’ wishes, and at most psychological harm, damage to the physician-patient relationship, and the potential for unwanted attempts at resuscitation,” said Dr. David J. Einstein, a resident at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Tufts Medical Center, both in Boston.
Despite their reluctance to have the discussion, however, the majority of residents said they preferred to discuss code status with patients themselves rather than hand it off to the attending physician, primarily out of a sense that it is their responsibility as physicians.
Yet these physicians in training did not seem to feel that they were also responsible for providing guidance to patients, Dr. Einstein said at the Palliative Care in Oncology Symposium.
“We felt that this represented an unmet need in training and practice. Residents and attendings should be providing guidance on all medical interventions, including CPR, and if they aren’t sure what to recommend, then they themselves should be seeking guidance from other experts, before asking a patient to falsely choose between an intervention and death,” he said.
The first discussion of code status – do not resuscitate (DNR) or do not intubate (DNI) – may occur in the hospital, and is often left to a resident physician. Ideally, the physician and patient should discuss the patient’s prognosis, goals for care, evaluation of CPR as a means of meeting those goals, and a recommendation.
But many residents lack training in the end-of-life discussion, which can have a significant impact on the quality of the patients’ remaining weeks or months of life.
Nationwide survey
Dr. Einstein and his colleagues conducted a nationwide survey to measure the likelihood that residents would discuss prognostic information and offer recommendations to patients with limited life expectancy. They also sought to determine why residents might be reluctant to provide discussion, and to evaluate their satisfaction with code-status discussions that both they and their attending physicians have conducted.
The survey presented respondents with a hypothetical case of a patient with stage IV adenocarcinoma of the lung metastatic to the brain. The patient, who has disease progression despite receiving first- and second-line therapy, presents to the emergency department with dyspnea and is slightly hypoxemic, but is not in distress. The patient has not previously established a code-status preference.
The investigators contacted 387 residency program directors by mail, 19 of whom agreed to participate and responded. They sent surveys to a total of 1,627 residents, 358 of which were completed and included.
The investigators found that slightly less than half of the respondents said they would share information with the patient about his/her prognosis and the relative benefit of CPR, and more than two-thirds said they would be unlikely to offer a specific recommendation.
“So even in the situation with a clearly declining patient, residents were as likely as not to provide the information needed to make an informed decision, and were far less likely to provide guidance on this decision,” Dr. Einstein said.
Asked the reason for their decisions, 69% of the residents who would not offer a recommendation said that the patient should make his/her own decision without any influence, and 26.5% said that the attending would not want them to offer a recommendation. Nonetheless, only 1.3% of this group said they believed that CPR would offer the patient a reasonable chance of resuscitation.
The majority of respondents who would offer a recommendation (93.5%) said they would recommend DNR and DNI.
Code-status talk a ‘responsibility’
When they were asked whether they would prefer the attending to discuss code status, nearly 70% of respondents disagreed.
Of those residents who said they preferred to retain the code-status discussion, 93.4% said they thought it was part of their responsibility as a physician, and 65.8% said they thought they had sufficient training and knowledge to do it. A minority in this group (2.5%) said that they would be likely to disagree with the attending’s estimate of prognosis, and 4.9% said they thought the attending would not share his/her estimate honestly.
When the authors asked about the residents’ general satisfaction with discussion of code status, “we learned two things: One, the residents are significantly more satisfied with their own discussions than their attendings’ discussions; and two, there is a substantial minority that is dissatisfied with all discussions, and a small number who are actually very satisfied,” Dr. Einstein said.
In a linear regression analysis testing for hypothesized correlations, the investigators found that more-senior residents were more likely to share prognostic information and make recommendations (P = .002). Residents who expressed an interest in hematology/oncology or palliative care specialization were also more likely to offer prognostic information, but not to make a recommendation about code status.
More-senior year of training correlated negatively with satisfaction with both the resident’s own and the attending’s discussion of code status.
“We found substantial dissatisfaction with code-status discussions in general, and we hypothesize that this is due to an internal conflict. When a resident knows that an intervention may be more harmful than beneficial, but thinks that the patient should make their own decision alone, then one may experience substantial frustration, and this would increase as training goes on and one becomes more sure of the outcomes of interventions like CPR,” Dr. Einstein said.
Generation gap
Evoking a potential generation gap between old-school doctors and the up-and-coming young physicians who by statute work fewer hours than their mentors had to, “I’m struck that [residents] don’t trust the attendings. When I was a resident, you didn’t do anything without asking the attending,” said Dr. Michael H. Levy, an invited discussant who is vice chair of medical oncology and director of the pain and palliative care program at Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia.
“I’m glad that the residents want to do it, but they have the same arrogance/ignorance that they don’t know how, so if we want them to do it, we have to train them,” he said. The symposium was cosponsored by AAHPM, ASCO, ASTRO, and MASCC. The study was supported in part by the Conquer Cancer Foundation. Dr. Einstein and Dr. Levy reported having no relevant disclosures.
Investigational sotatercept improves heme parameters in MDS
SAN FRANCISCO – A first-in-class investigational agent called sotatercept appears to be safe and to improve hematologic parameters in patients with lower-risk myelodysplastic syndrome or nonproliferative chronic myelomonocytic leukemia and anemia requiring transfusion, a study showed.
In the open-label phase II dose-finding study of sotatercept in patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) or nonproliferative chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML), hematologic improvement according to International Working Group (IWG) 2006 criteria was seen in 24 of 53 evaluable patients, said Dr. Rami Komrokji of the Moffitt Cancer Center,Tampa.
The patients were all refractory to, or were deemed to have a low chance of responding to, an erythropoiesis-stimulating agent (ESA), Dr. Komrokji said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.
“A medication like sotatercept would probably have a role in the management of anemia in lower-risk MDS patients. The treatment is administered every 3 weeks, which makes it also logistically easier for the patients to get the treatment. I don’t think we have seen any safety concern, at least at this point, about the chronic use of this medication,” he said in an interview.
Sotatercept (ACE-011) is an activin type IIA receptor fusion protein that acts on late-stage erythropoiesis to increase the release of mature erythrocytes into circulation. The mechanism of action is distinct from that of erythropoietins such as epoetin alfa (Procrit, Epogen) or darbapoietin alfa (Aranesp).
In clinical trials with healthy volunteers, sotatercept has been shown to increase hemoglobin levels, suggesting that it could help to reduce anemia and perhaps lessen dependence on transfusions among patients with lower-risk MDS, Dr. Komrokji said.
He and his colleagues at centers in the United States and France enrolled patients with low-risk or intermediate-1–risk MDS as defined by the International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS), or nonproliferative CMML (fewer than 13,000 white blood cells per microliter). The patients had to have anemia requiring at least 2 red blood cell (RBC) transfusions in the 12 weeks before enrollment for hemoglobin levels below 9.0 g/dL, and no response, loss of response, or a low chance of response to an ESA. Those patients with serum erythropoietin levels greater than 500 mIU/mL were considered to have a low chance of responding to an ESA.
The patients received subcutaneous injections of sotatercept at doses of 0.1, 0.3, 0.5, or 1.0 mg/kg once every 3 weeks.
As noted, the rate of overall hematologic improvement by IWG 2006 criteria was 45%, occurring in 24 of 53 patients available for evaluation. Five of 44 patients with a high transfusion burden (4 or more RBC units required within 8 weeks) were able to be free of RBC transfusions for at least 8 weeks, as were 5 of 9 with a low transfusion burden (fewer than 4 RBC units over a period of 8 weeks).
Looking at the efficacy in patients with a high transfusion burden, the investigators found that 4 of 6 assigned to the 0.3-mg/kg dose group and 8 of 14 assigned to the 1-mg/kg dose group had a reduction in transfusion burden. The median duration of effect was 106 days, with the longest response lasting for 150 days.
There were no major adverse events in the study, and no apparent increase in risk for thrombosis, as had been seen in some studies of ESAs. Another theoretical risk with this type of agent is hypertension, but there was only one grade 3 case and no grade 4 cases of hypertension in the study, Dr. Komrokji said.
Sotatercept is currently in phase II trials for anemia related to hematologic malignancies and other diseases.
SAN FRANCISCO – A first-in-class investigational agent called sotatercept appears to be safe and to improve hematologic parameters in patients with lower-risk myelodysplastic syndrome or nonproliferative chronic myelomonocytic leukemia and anemia requiring transfusion, a study showed.
In the open-label phase II dose-finding study of sotatercept in patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) or nonproliferative chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML), hematologic improvement according to International Working Group (IWG) 2006 criteria was seen in 24 of 53 evaluable patients, said Dr. Rami Komrokji of the Moffitt Cancer Center,Tampa.
The patients were all refractory to, or were deemed to have a low chance of responding to, an erythropoiesis-stimulating agent (ESA), Dr. Komrokji said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.
“A medication like sotatercept would probably have a role in the management of anemia in lower-risk MDS patients. The treatment is administered every 3 weeks, which makes it also logistically easier for the patients to get the treatment. I don’t think we have seen any safety concern, at least at this point, about the chronic use of this medication,” he said in an interview.
Sotatercept (ACE-011) is an activin type IIA receptor fusion protein that acts on late-stage erythropoiesis to increase the release of mature erythrocytes into circulation. The mechanism of action is distinct from that of erythropoietins such as epoetin alfa (Procrit, Epogen) or darbapoietin alfa (Aranesp).
In clinical trials with healthy volunteers, sotatercept has been shown to increase hemoglobin levels, suggesting that it could help to reduce anemia and perhaps lessen dependence on transfusions among patients with lower-risk MDS, Dr. Komrokji said.
He and his colleagues at centers in the United States and France enrolled patients with low-risk or intermediate-1–risk MDS as defined by the International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS), or nonproliferative CMML (fewer than 13,000 white blood cells per microliter). The patients had to have anemia requiring at least 2 red blood cell (RBC) transfusions in the 12 weeks before enrollment for hemoglobin levels below 9.0 g/dL, and no response, loss of response, or a low chance of response to an ESA. Those patients with serum erythropoietin levels greater than 500 mIU/mL were considered to have a low chance of responding to an ESA.
The patients received subcutaneous injections of sotatercept at doses of 0.1, 0.3, 0.5, or 1.0 mg/kg once every 3 weeks.
As noted, the rate of overall hematologic improvement by IWG 2006 criteria was 45%, occurring in 24 of 53 patients available for evaluation. Five of 44 patients with a high transfusion burden (4 or more RBC units required within 8 weeks) were able to be free of RBC transfusions for at least 8 weeks, as were 5 of 9 with a low transfusion burden (fewer than 4 RBC units over a period of 8 weeks).
Looking at the efficacy in patients with a high transfusion burden, the investigators found that 4 of 6 assigned to the 0.3-mg/kg dose group and 8 of 14 assigned to the 1-mg/kg dose group had a reduction in transfusion burden. The median duration of effect was 106 days, with the longest response lasting for 150 days.
There were no major adverse events in the study, and no apparent increase in risk for thrombosis, as had been seen in some studies of ESAs. Another theoretical risk with this type of agent is hypertension, but there was only one grade 3 case and no grade 4 cases of hypertension in the study, Dr. Komrokji said.
Sotatercept is currently in phase II trials for anemia related to hematologic malignancies and other diseases.
SAN FRANCISCO – A first-in-class investigational agent called sotatercept appears to be safe and to improve hematologic parameters in patients with lower-risk myelodysplastic syndrome or nonproliferative chronic myelomonocytic leukemia and anemia requiring transfusion, a study showed.
In the open-label phase II dose-finding study of sotatercept in patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) or nonproliferative chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML), hematologic improvement according to International Working Group (IWG) 2006 criteria was seen in 24 of 53 evaluable patients, said Dr. Rami Komrokji of the Moffitt Cancer Center,Tampa.
The patients were all refractory to, or were deemed to have a low chance of responding to, an erythropoiesis-stimulating agent (ESA), Dr. Komrokji said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.
“A medication like sotatercept would probably have a role in the management of anemia in lower-risk MDS patients. The treatment is administered every 3 weeks, which makes it also logistically easier for the patients to get the treatment. I don’t think we have seen any safety concern, at least at this point, about the chronic use of this medication,” he said in an interview.
Sotatercept (ACE-011) is an activin type IIA receptor fusion protein that acts on late-stage erythropoiesis to increase the release of mature erythrocytes into circulation. The mechanism of action is distinct from that of erythropoietins such as epoetin alfa (Procrit, Epogen) or darbapoietin alfa (Aranesp).
In clinical trials with healthy volunteers, sotatercept has been shown to increase hemoglobin levels, suggesting that it could help to reduce anemia and perhaps lessen dependence on transfusions among patients with lower-risk MDS, Dr. Komrokji said.
He and his colleagues at centers in the United States and France enrolled patients with low-risk or intermediate-1–risk MDS as defined by the International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS), or nonproliferative CMML (fewer than 13,000 white blood cells per microliter). The patients had to have anemia requiring at least 2 red blood cell (RBC) transfusions in the 12 weeks before enrollment for hemoglobin levels below 9.0 g/dL, and no response, loss of response, or a low chance of response to an ESA. Those patients with serum erythropoietin levels greater than 500 mIU/mL were considered to have a low chance of responding to an ESA.
The patients received subcutaneous injections of sotatercept at doses of 0.1, 0.3, 0.5, or 1.0 mg/kg once every 3 weeks.
As noted, the rate of overall hematologic improvement by IWG 2006 criteria was 45%, occurring in 24 of 53 patients available for evaluation. Five of 44 patients with a high transfusion burden (4 or more RBC units required within 8 weeks) were able to be free of RBC transfusions for at least 8 weeks, as were 5 of 9 with a low transfusion burden (fewer than 4 RBC units over a period of 8 weeks).
Looking at the efficacy in patients with a high transfusion burden, the investigators found that 4 of 6 assigned to the 0.3-mg/kg dose group and 8 of 14 assigned to the 1-mg/kg dose group had a reduction in transfusion burden. The median duration of effect was 106 days, with the longest response lasting for 150 days.
There were no major adverse events in the study, and no apparent increase in risk for thrombosis, as had been seen in some studies of ESAs. Another theoretical risk with this type of agent is hypertension, but there was only one grade 3 case and no grade 4 cases of hypertension in the study, Dr. Komrokji said.
Sotatercept is currently in phase II trials for anemia related to hematologic malignancies and other diseases.
Key clinical point: Sotatercept is a first-in-its-class agent that stimulates erythropoiesis through a mechanism different from that of erythropoietins.
Major finding: The rate of overall hematologic improvement by IWG 2006 criteria was 45%, occurring in 24 of 53 patients available for evaluation.
Data source: An ongoing phase II study with data available on 53 patients with MDS or nonproliferative CMML.
Disclosures: The study is sponsored by Celgene. Dr. Komrokji reported consulting for and receiving research funding from the company.