Back to Search Start Over

Randomised, Phase II study of selumetinib, an oral inhibitor of MEK, in combination with cisplatin and gemcitabine chemotherapy for patients with advanced biliary tract cancer

Authors :
Mark K. Doherty
Vincent C. Tam
Mairéad G. McNamara
Raymond Jang
David Hedley
Eric Chen
Neesha Dhani
Patricia Tang
Hao-Wen Sim
Grainne M. O’Kane
Stephanie DeLuca
Lisa Wang
Theresa Pedutem
Jennifer J. Knox
Source :
British journal of cancer. 127(8)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Cisplatin and gemcitabine (CisGem) are standard chemotherapy for advanced biliary tract cancer (BTC). The MEK inhibitor selumetinib showed synergy with gemcitabine when administered sequentially in BTC. This randomised Phase 2 trial aimed to assess the efficacy of sequential or continuous selumetinib with CisGem.Patients with advanced BTC received CisGem; arm A included selumetinib every day, arm B: selumetinib, days 1-5, 8-19 each cycle. Arm C received CisGem alone. Selumetinib was dosed at 75 mg BID but amended to 50 mg BID due to toxicity.In all, 51 participants were evaluable for response. No significant difference was seen in mean change in tumour size at 10 weeks between arms A and C (-7.8% vs -12.8%, P = 0.54) or arms B and C (-15% vs -12.8%, P = 0.78). There was no difference in median progression-free survival (6.0, 7.0, 6.3 months, P 0.95) or overall survival (11.7, 11.7, 12.8 months, P = 0.70) for arms A, B and C, respectively. More participants experienced grade 3-4 toxicities in selumetinib-containing arms. More participants in arm A required chemotherapy dose reductions (P = 0.01) with lower chemotherapy dose intensity during the first 10 weeks.Adding sequential or continuous selumetinib to CisGem failed to improve efficacy and increased toxicity in patients with advanced BTC.

Details

ISSN :
15321827
Volume :
127
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British journal of cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7394e7407df809bae5679dc9eec19235