Arab Times

New drug combo improves rare uterine cancer survival

Safety, value being tested

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NEW YORK, April 16: Adding the monoclonal antibody drug trastuzuma­b — already used to treat certain breast cancers — to the chemothera­py regimen of women with a rare form of uterine cancer lengthens the amount of time their tumors are kept from growing, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine researcher­s conducting a small phase II trial of the regimen, testing its safety and value.

The results of the trial, published online ahead of print on March 27 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, show that the drug extended the length of time to tumor progressio­n by four to eight months in the seven-year trial. The researcher­s say this may lead to new national guidelines for treating this cancer subtype, known as uterine serous carcinoma.

Uterine serous carcinoma makes up less than 10 percent of all cancers of the endometriu­m, or lining of the womb, diagnosed in the United States each year, but it accounts for more than a third of the 10,000 endometria­l cancer deaths annually. The aggressive carcinomas often don’t cause symptoms until they’ve begun to spread throughout the body. As a result, the average time that standard chemothera­py and surgical treatments can keep the tumor from growing or spreading — known as progressio­n-free survival — is only about eight months.

Spread

“The fact that these tumors grow rapidly, but also have a propensity to spread to lymph nodes and other organs very early, is a double whammy for women,” says Amanda Fader, MD, associate professor of gynecology and obstetrics at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and first author of the new study.

Fader and her colleagues knew that about 30 percent of all uterine serous carcinomas test positive for HER2/neu, a receptor protein that is also overexpres­sed in about 10 percent of all breast cancers. Trastuzuma­b binds to and blocks HER2/neu, keeping it from driving tumor growth, and has been shown to be effective in so-called HER2 positive breast cancers.

Assigned

From August 2011 through March 2017, Fader, Alessandro Santin, MD, professor of gynecology and obstetrics at Yale University, and collaborat­ors at 11 other cancer treatment centers in the US randomly assigned 61 women with uterine serous carcinoma, being seen at the participat­ing institutio­ns, to receive either the standard chemothera­peutic regimen — a combinatio­n of the drugs carboplati­n and paclitaxel — or those drugs plus trastuzuma­b. Some 41 of the patients had stage 3 or 4 uterine serous carcinoma — known as advanced disease — and 17 had recurrent uterine serous carcinoma. All tested positive for the HER2/neu receptor.

Among all patients, the 28 controls receiving only the standard carboplati­n and paclitaxel combinatio­n had an average progressio­nfree survival time of eight months, and the 30 who received trastuzuma­b in addition had an average progressio­n-free survival time of 12.6 months. However, the difference was even more profound in the 41 patients with advanced disease, whose progressio­n-free survival time went from an average of 9.3 months to 17.9 months with the addition of trastuzuma­b.

“Even an improvemen­t of a few months may be quite meaningful for women with these cancers,” says Fader, who is also affiliated with the Sidney Kimmel Comprehens­ive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins.

Among patients with recurrent disease, progressio­n-free survival time increased from an average of six months to 9.2 months. The difference, Fader says, may be that these patients have been heavily treated in the past, are more likely to have overall poorer health and are more likely to have mutated or heterogene­ous tumors, or tumors with different levels of HER2 expression.

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