Abstract 789P
Background
RW data on 1Lm niraparib use in patients (pts) with EOC are sparse. The CHAR1ZMA study described treatment (tx) discontinuation for pts with EOC prescribed 1Lm niraparib monotherapy using a US RW database.
Methods
Eligibility criteria were previously described [1]. Pts were selected from the nationwide electronic health record-derived de-identified Flatiron Health database. Time to tx discontinuation (TTD; index [start of 1Lm niraparib] to 1Lm niraparib end date) was estimated via Kaplan-Meier methods. Results were stratified by early discontinuers (pts discontinued ≤90 days) and persisters (pts discontinued >90 days post-initiation/censored), and by breast cancer gene (BRCA)/homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) status.
Results
Among 414 EOC pts, 83% had stage III/IV disease, 26% were HR-deficient (HRd), and median age at index was 67 yrs. Median follow-up was 12.4 mo. Median TTD was 7.5 mo (95% confidence interval [CI] 5.9, 9.0) overall and increased by 4.9 mo to 12.4 mo (95% CI 10.3, 17.3) for persisters (n=296). Drug toxicity was cited as a reason for tx discontinuation in 67% of early discontinuers (n=118) and 22% of persisters (n=133) (Table). Disease progression was cited as a reason for tx discontinuation in 32% of early discontinuers and 74% of persisters. Dose modifications varied by discontinuation status (no dose modification was reported in 28% of persisters and 59% of early discontinuers). In the HRd subgroup, median TTD was 13.1 mo (95% CI 9.2, 22.2) overall (n=106), and increased by 9.1 mo to 22.2 mo (95% CI 13.5, not reached) for persisters (n=83).
Conclusions
This RW study demonstrates pts with EOC on 1Lm niraparib for >90 days have a much longer TTD than all pts. Effective clinical management of drug toxicity among 1Lm niraparib pts in the first 90 days of tx may help pts stay on tx and experience full therapeutic benefit.
Table: 789P
n (%) | Overall (n=414) | Early discontinuers (n=118) | Persisters (n=296) |
BRCA/HRD status* | |||
HR-deficient | 106 (25.6) | 23 (19.5) | 83 (28.0) |
HR-proficient | 71 (17.1) | 15 (12.7) | 56 (18.9) |
BRCA wild-type | 346 (83.6) | 98 (83.1) | 248 (83.8) |
BRCA mutant | 48 (11.6) | 9 (7.6) | 39 (13.2) |
Discontinued | 251 (60.6) | 118 (100.0) | 133 (44.9) |
Reasons for tx discontinuation † | |||
Toxicity | 108 (43.0) | 79 (66.9) | 29 (21.8) |
Disease progression | 137 (54.6) | 38 (32.2) | 99 (74.4) |
Other‡ | 25 (10.0) | 17 (14.4) | 8 (6.0) |
Unknown | 3 (1.2) | 0 (0.0) | 3 (2.3) |
*BRCA/HRD not mutually exclusive groups. †Of pts who discontinued, pts may report ≥1 reason for discontinuation. ‡Other includes, but is not limited to, disease-related symptoms not specific to tx.
[1] Coleman RL, et al. Presented at ESMO Gyn 2023 (43P).
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Medical writing support was provided by Claire Kelly, PhD at Fishawack Indicia, UK, part of Fishawack Health Ltd. and funded by GSK. Statistical programming support was provided by Ramsanjay RK at GSK.
Legal entity responsible for the study
GSK.
Funding
GSK219843.
Disclosure
F. Backes: Financial Interests, Personal, Advisory Board: GSK, AstraZeneca, Clovis, Agenus, ImmunoGen, Merck, Eisai, Myriad; Financial Interests, Institutional, Principal Investigator: Natera, Merck, Eisai, Clovis, Immunogen, BeiGene. T. Boyle, J. Lim, J. Hartman, J.M. Schilder, J. Hurteau, A. Golembesky: Financial Interests, Personal, Full or part-time Employment: GSK. J. Perhanidis: Financial Interests, Personal, Full or part-time Employment: GSK; Financial Interests, Personal, Stocks/Shares: GSK; Financial Interests, Personal, Stocks or ownership: Boston Scientific. R. Salani: Financial Interests, Personal, Advisory Board: Merck, Seagen, Mersana; Financial Interests, Personal, Speaker’s Bureau: Merck; Financial Interests, Personal, Writing Engagement: UpToDate; Non-Financial Interests, Personal and Institutional, Principal Investigator: Genentech.
Resources from the same session
790P - Uniform prospective molecular analysis of endometrial carcinoma: Feasibility, outcomes, and effect on management
Presenter: Bradley Corr
Session: Poster session 11
791P - Development and validation of nomograms to predict survival in patients with high-grade serous ovarian cancer
Presenter: Xiaolian Peng
Session: Poster session 11
792P - Prognostic role of the modeled CA-125 KELIM in early FIGO stage I and II ovarian cancers (OC): A GCIG individual-patient data meta-analysis
Presenter: Pauline Corbaux
Session: Poster session 11
793P - Strong relationships between the CA-125 KELIM score and the tumor biological effects after neo-adjuvant chemotherapy in advanced ovarian cancer patients: CHIVA trial (GINECO)
Presenter: Ana Maria Catana
Session: Poster session 11
794P - Efficacy of gemcitabine (gem) based therapy in ovarian clear cell carcinoma (OCCC)
Presenter: Jerold Loh
Session: Poster session 11
795P - Tolerability and effectiveness of niraparib in long-term responders with platinum-sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer (GEICO-88R study)
Presenter: Juan Cueva Banuelos
Session: Poster session 11
796P - Initial management and long-term outcome of advanced low-grade serous ovarian cancer (LGSOC) exploring role of surgery and maintenance therapy in the French multicentre ESME database
Presenter: Thomas Papazyan
Session: Poster session 11
797P - Impact of consolidation cycles in predicting recurrence in patients treated with EMA-CO for high-risk gestational trophoblastic neoplasia
Presenter: Antoine DELEUZE
Session: Poster session 11
798P - Survival analysis of non-metastatic gestational choriocarcinoma (NMGCC) patients treated with chemotherapy
Presenter: Sakhr Alshwayyat
Session: Poster session 11