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Niraparib in metastatic pancreatic cancer after previous chemotherapy (NIRA-PANC): A phase 2 trial

Authors :
Andrew K. Godwin
Anup Kasi
Carolyn Foster
Stephen K. Williamson
Ziyan Y. Pessetto
Timothy M. Schmitt
Raed Al-Rajabi
Anwaar Saeed
Malgorzata A. Witek
Joaquina Baranda
Sean C. Kumer
Weijing Sun
Steven A. Soper
Prabhakar Chalise
Source :
Journal of Clinical Oncology. 37:TPS4168-TPS4168
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), 2019.

Abstract

TPS4168 Background: Attempts to improve therapy for patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma with traditional chemotherapy have largely failed to meaningfully improve survival. Therefore, there is a critical need for identification of specific molecular changes that define prognosis and potentially guide therapy decisions. Defective DNA damage response pathways in pancreatic cancer represent a targeted opportunity for treatment. PARP inhibitors exert activity in tumor cells that may not be effectively able to repair initially single-stranded and cumulatively double-stranded DNA breaks and can have a heightened susceptibility in tumor cells over normal tissue. This concept is referred to as synthetic lethality. Niraparib is an orally available, potent, highly selective PARP-1 and -2 inhibitor. We are studying the efficacy of Niraparib in pancreatic cancer patients that harbor DNA repair defects. Methods: This study is funded by a research grant from TESARO. Pre-screening of patients to find biomarker positive patients is funded by KU Cancer Center. This is a phase II open label single arm trial in metastatic pancreatic cancer patients with germline or somatic mutations, either already known, or tested after consent to pre-screening tumor tissue analysis in BRCA1/2, PALB2, ATM, NBN, ATR, BRIP1, IDH1/2, RAD51, RAD51B/C/D, RAD54L, CDK12, BARD1, FAM175A, BAP1, CHEK1/2, GEN1, MRE11A, XRCC2, SHFM1, FANCD2, FANCA, FANCC, FANCG, RPA1, ARID1A. Patients are being treated with Niraparib 300mg or 200mg by mouth daily for 28 days (1 cycle = 28 days) (200mg dose is for participants whose baseline weight is < 77 kg [169.756 lbs] or baseline platelet count is < 150,000 µL). The primary objective is to assess antitumor efficacy of niraparib using Objective Response Rate per RECIST 1.1. Secondary objectives include PFS, OS, DCR, DOR, and safety. Eligible patients received > 1 line of therapy, no prior PARP inhibitor(s), have measurable disease, and ECOG PS 0-1. Accrual target enrollment of 18 patients over a period of 24 months with a study duration of 30 months. Correlative studies include assessment of pharmacokinetics, circulating tumor cells and storing samples for future research. The trial is currently enrolling. Clinical trial information: NCT03553004.

Details

ISSN :
15277755 and 0732183X
Volume :
37
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bfdaec971ea110b08771a6965521df73
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1200/jco.2019.37.15_suppl.tps4168