QuoteReplyTopic: Zometa - Phase III Trial Results Posted: Dec 20 2013 at 8:33am
For women with chemo-resistant breast cancer (those that don't achieve pCR), bisphosphonate treatment fails to improve outcomes
Treatment with the bisphosphonate zoledronate did not improve outcomes for women with chemoresistant breast cancer, according to initial results of a phase III clinical trial presented at the 2013 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.
Many patients with breast cancer are treated withchemotherapy prior to surgery. In some patients who receive this form of treatment, which is called neoadjuvant therapy, no residual invasive cancer can be detected in breast tissue samples and lymph nodes removed during surgery. Patients with residual disease are considered to have breast cancer that is resistant to chemotherapy, and emerging data indicate that they experience poorer long-term outcomes compared with women who respond completely to neoadjuvant therapy.
"Because patients with residual disease after neoadjuvant chemotherapy are considered to have chemoresistant breast cancer, they have few postsurgery treatment options," said Gunter von Minckwitz, M.D., Ph.D., chairman of the German Breast Group in Neu-Isenburg, Germany. "We evaluated a new postsurgery treatment for these patients, the bisphosphonate zoledronate, in a phase III clinical trial.
"We are disappointed to report that zoledronate had no effect on event-free survival. That is, it had no effect on the number of patients who had disease relapse, developed a new cancer, or died.Although the results are completely negative, we hope that our experience running the first phase III clinical trial to test a treatment in women who had not had a complete response to neoadjuvant therapy will inform future post-neoadjuvant phase III clinical trials," added von Minckwitz, who is also professor of gynecology at the University of Frankfurt. "We experienced a number of challenges while conducting this study, and are sharing what we have learned with other researchers running, or thinking of running, these extremely complicated clinical trials."
The phase III clinical trial conducted by von Minckwitz and colleagues is referred to as the NATAN study, or NeoAdjuvant Trial Add-oN. From February 2005 to May 2009, 654 patients who had residual invasive disease detected in breast tissue samples and/or lymph nodes removed during surgery after having received neoadjuvant chemotherapy were enrolled in the study. After surgery, patients were randomly assigned to either zoledronate for five years or no investigational postsurgery treatment. Those with hormone receptor-positive disease also received antihormone treatment for five years. From 2007, patients with HER2-positive disease also received trastuzumab for one year.
During a median follow-up of 48 months, 154 events were reported, with no difference observed between the two groups in an interim analysis for futility.
SAN
ANTONIO -- Use of bisphosphonates benefits postmenopausal women with
breast cancer the most, a meta-analysis that scrutinized outcomes in
17,000 breast cancer patients suggests.
Among 1,1036
postmenopausal women selected from a meta-analysis, 21.9% experienced
distant recurrences of breast cancer if they were not on bisphosphonate
therapy compared with 18.4% of women who were taking bisphosphonates --
a 3.5% difference that was highly statistically significant (P=0.0003), according to Robert Coleman, MBBS, MD, professor of medicine at the University of Sheffield in Sheffield, England.
During
that same 10-year period, distant bone metastases occurred in 8.8% of
postmenopausal women not treated with bisphosphonates compared with 5.9%
of those who were on the treatments -- a 2.9% difference that also
was highly significant (P<0.0001), Coleman reported at the annual San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.
In
a related presentation, another team of researchers found no benefit in
taking bisphosphonates as post-neoadjuvant therapy in the Neo-Adjuvant
Trial Add-On (NATAN).
However, Gunter von Minckwitz, MD, PhD, chairman of the German Breast Group at Neu-Isenburg, told MedPage Today
that there was a trend in favor of bisphosphonates among postmenopausal
women in his study of women 55 years of age or older that "is in
concordance with the meta-analysis."
When he and his colleagues
write treatment guidelines, von Minckwitz said that it is likely
bisphosphonates will be recommended for use in postmenopausal women with
breast cancer.
For the meta-analysis, Coleman and colleagues
reviewed data from 15 years of bisphosphonate trials, including seven
trials involving the use of clodronate. From those trials, they
identified 5,053 patients for the meta-analysis. In 29 trials involving
the use of aminobisphosphonates, the research team added 12,738 patients
for inclusion in the study. About 65% of the aminobisphosphonates used
in the trials was zoledronic acid. Oral ibandronate accounted for
another 24%.
In all of the women in the study, breast cancer recurrence was decreased by 1.1% in those on bisphosphonates (P=0.08); and distant recurrences were reduced 1.4% in women on bisphosphonates (P=.03). In the whole cohort, bone recurrences were reduced by 1.5%, which was significant (P=0.0009).
Coleman
also found that breast-cancer-specific mortality was reduced by 3.1%
from 18.3% among postmenopausal women not on bisphosphonates to 15.2%
for those on the therapy, also a significant finding (P=0.004). All-cause mortality was also significantly in favor of postmenopausal women on bisphosphonates (23.8% to 21.5%, P=0.007).
"Adjuvant
bisphosphonates reduce bone metastases and improve survival in
postmenopausal women," Coleman said. "We did not see any significant
effects on non-breast-cancer deaths, contralateral breast cancer, or
loco-regional recurrence."
The NATAN trial, von Minckwitz said in a
press briefing, assigned 343 women after breast cancer surgery to
zoledronate; another 350 were assigned to observation. The researchers
cut the trial short when it appeared that recurrence events were less
than half of what was expected and the chance of finding a positive
result was remote.
The researchers found no difference in
disease-free survival and no difference in overall survival. Von
Minckwitz demonstrated a slight trend in favor of bisphosphonate therapy
for women over 55 years of age. However, none of the subgroups
scrutinized achieved statistical significance.
"In this first
randomized post-neoadjuvant study, treatment of zoledronate does not
improve outcome in patients without a pathological complete response
after neoadjuvant anthracycline-taxane based chemotherapy for early
breast cancer," von Minckwitz said. He said the researchers did not
observe any new safety signals for zoledronate.
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