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Adjuvant Sirolimus Does Not Improve Outcome in Pet Dogs Receiving Standard-of-Care Therapy for Appendicular Osteosarcoma: A Prospective, Randomized Trial of 324 Dogs

Authors :
Amy K. LeBlanc
Timothy M. Fan
Heather Wilson-Robles
Corey F. Saba
Janean Fidel
Nicole C. Northrup
Annette N. Smith
Michael O. Childress
Shawna Klahn
Jennifer L. Willcox
David M. Vail
William C. Kisseberth
Megan E. Brown
Lisa G. Barber
Erika L. Krick
Haley Leeper
Kristine Burgess
Chand Khanna
Raelene M. Wouda
Susan E. Lana
Nikolaos Dervisis
Olya Martin
Angela L McCleary-Wheeler
Mary Lynn Higginbotham
J. Paul Woods
Jeffrey N. Bryan
Aswini Cherukuri
Steven E. Suter
Stephanie S Lindley
Daniel L. Gustafson
Brandan G Wustefeld-Janssens
Laura E. Selmic
Kristen M. Weishaar
Brian K. Flesner
Christina Mazcko
Jenna H Burton
Erika P. Berger
Sara D. Allstadt
Antonella Borgatti
Jennifer A. Mahoney
Cheryl E. Balkman
Kaitlin M. Curran
Anthony J. Mutsaers
Cheryl A. London
Source :
Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research, vol 27, iss 11, Clin Cancer Res
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2021.

Abstract

Purpose: The mTOR pathway has been identified as a key nutrient signaling hub that participates in metastatic progression of high-grade osteosarcoma. Inhibition of mTOR signaling is biologically achievable with sirolimus, and might slow the outgrowth of distant metastases. In this study, pet dogs with appendicular osteosarcoma were leveraged as high-value biologic models for pediatric osteosarcoma, to assess mTOR inhibition as a therapeutic strategy for attenuating metastatic disease progression. Patients and Methods: A total of 324 pet dogs diagnosed with treatment-naïve appendicular osteosarcoma were randomized into a two-arm, multicenter, parallel superiority trial whereby dogs received amputation of the affected limb, followed by adjuvant carboplatin chemotherapy ± oral sirolimus therapy. The primary outcome measure was disease-free interval (DFI), as assessed by serial physical and radiologic detection of emergent macroscopic metastases; secondary outcomes included overall 1- and 2-year survival rates, and sirolimus pharmacokinetic variables and their correlative relationship to adverse events and clinical outcomes. Results: There was no significant difference in the median DFI or overall survival between the two arms of this trial; the median DFI and survival for standard-of-care (SOC; defined as amputation and carboplatin therapy) dogs was 180 days [95% confidence interval (CI), 144–237] and 282 days (95% CI, 224–383) and for SOC + sirolimus dogs, it was 204 days (95% CI, 157–217) and 280 days (95% CI, 252–332), respectively. Conclusions: In a population of pet dogs nongenomically segmented for predicted mTOR inhibition response, sequentially administered adjuvant sirolimus, although well tolerated when added to a backbone of therapy, did not extend DFI or survival in dogs with appendicular osteosarcoma.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research, vol 27, iss 11, Clin Cancer Res
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....733d5a6dd323a4dc1ec07778b41b81ee