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Cocktail & Poster Display session

161P - Early phase cancer clinical trials: A viable treatment option for patients?

Date

16 Oct 2024

Session

Cocktail & Poster Display session

Presenters

Rhona Dawson

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2024) 9 (suppl_6): 1-4. 10.1016/esmoop/esmoop103744

Authors

R.C. Dawson1, R. Yan2, E.S. Poles Saad2, H. Mistry3, J. Herrero Colomina4, T. Christodoulou5, L. Sutherland6, I.S. Chin7, N. Cook8, M.G. Krebs9, F. Thistlethwaite2, D.M. Graham9, L. Carter2

Author affiliations

  • 1 Experimental Cancer Medicine Dept., The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, M20 4BX - Manchester/GB
  • 2 Medical Oncology, The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, M20 4BX - Manchester/GB
  • 3 The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, M20 4BX - Manchester/GB
  • 4 Medical Oncology Dept., The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, M20 4BX - Manchester/GB
  • 5 Ecmt, The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, M20 4BX - Manchester/GB
  • 6 Pharmacy, The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, M20 4BX - Manchester/GB
  • 7 Oncology Department, University Hospital Coventry - University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust, CV2 2DX - Coventry/GB
  • 8 Department Of Medical Oncology, The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, M20 4BX - Manchester/GB
  • 9 Experimental Cancer Medicine Team, The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, M20 4BX - Manchester/GB

Resources

This content is available to ESMO members and event participants.

Abstract 161P

Background

The rising prevalence of cancer and swift development of anti-cancer therapies have driven changes in Early Phase Cancer Clinical Trials (EPCCTs). Modern EPCCTs often investigate response rates and survival outcomes alongside safety and tolerability. This study aimed to analyse a six-year EPCTT patient cohort to evaluate response rates.

Methods

A retrospective data analysis was performed on patients enrolled into EPCCTs at The Christie NHS Foundation Trust from Jan 2018 to Dec 2023. Data collected included demographics, prior systemic therapies, sites of disease, performance status, baseline bloods, type of trial therapy, best response, and duration of response. Statistical analyses were conducted on overall response rate (ORR), defined as partial response (PR) + complete response (CR), and disease control rate (DCR), defined as CR + PR + stable disease (SD).

Results

525 patients were treated on 98 EPCCTs. All patients received at least one dose of treatment with median of 4 cycles. 93% of patients were off trial at data collection, 73.1% due to progression, 11% from toxicity. 470 patients were evaluable for response. The ORR was 14.3% and DCR was 63.9%. Of the 238 patients with SD, 48.7% had duration of >6 months. The DCR in monotherapy (66.2%) and combination (62.8%) trials was similar. The difference in response rates due to sex (p 0.016), presence of liver metastasis (p=0.0001), Royal Marsden Hospital prognostic score (p=0.0001), Gustave Roussy Immune Score (p=0.0001), and LDH (p=0.0001) were all statistically significant. The median progression free survival was 4 months (SE 0.2, 95% CI 3.4-4.5) and median overall survival 10 months (SE 0.63, 95% CI 8.7-11.2). Patients with SD at 10 weeks have a 12-month survival probability of 0.53 (0.47-0.61) versus 0.12 (0.07-0.19) for PD. Table: 161P

Category N %
Age Median 60 years (18-83)
Sex
Female 256 48.8
Male 269 51.2
Ethnicity
White 444 84.6
Asian 11 2.1
Black 4 0.8
Other 2 0.4
Unknown 64 12.2
Disease type
Lung 131 25.0
Lower GI 86 16.4
Urological 63 12.0
Gynaecological 47 9.0
Breast 46 8.8
Other 152 28.9
Number of metastases
0 7 1.3
1 137 26.1
2 174 33.1
3+ 207 39.4
Liver metastases
No 323 61.5
Yes 202 38.5
ECOG
0 160 30.5
1 359 68.4
2 6 1.1
Number of prior treatment lines
0 40 7.6
1 144 27.4
2 134 25.5
3+ 207 39.4
Trial treatment
Monotherapy 353 67.2
Combination 172 32.8
Type of trial drug
Chemotherapy 62 11.8
Drug conjugate 64 12.2
Immunotherapy 92 17.5
Targeted 229 43.6
Targeted + chemotherapy 24 4.6
Targeted + immunotherapy 38 7.2
Other 16 3.0

Conclusions

EPCCTs are a valid treatment approach for patients with advanced cancer with two thirds of patients having DCR. Factors including LDH, presence of liver metastasis and sex contribute to the differences in response rates seen.

Editorial acknowledgement

Clinical trial identification

Legal entity responsible for the study

The authors.

Funding

Has not received any funding.

Disclosure

All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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