Phase II Trial of Ixabepilone, an Epothilone B Analog, in Patients With Metastatic Breast Cancer Previously Untreated With Taxanes

Neelima Denduluri(Center for Cancer Research), Jennifer A. Low(Center for Cancer Research), James J. Lee(Center for Cancer Research), Arlene Berman(Center for Cancer Research), Janice M. Walshe(Center for Cancer Research), Ujala Vatas(Center for Cancer Research), Catherine K. Chow(Center for Cancer Research), Seth M. Steinberg(Center for Cancer Research), Sherry Yang(Center for Cancer Research), Sandra M. Swain(MedStar Washington Hospital Center)
Journal of Clinical Oncology
July 3, 2007
Cited by 166Open Access
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Abstract

PURPOSE: Ixabepilone is an epothilone B analog that binds to microtubules and results in microtubule stabilization and mitotic arrest. Ixabepilone was evaluated for efficacy and safety in a phase II clinical trial for women with metastatic breast cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients were eligible if they had not previously received treatment with a taxane and had measurable metastatic breast cancer. Ixabepilone was administered at 6 mg/m(2)/d intravenously days 1 through 5 every 3 weeks until unacceptable toxicity or disease progression. Patients underwent pretreatment and post-treatment tumor biopsies, and tissues were analyzed for acetylated alpha-tubulin, tau-1, and p53 expression when possible. RESULTS: Twenty-three patients received 210 cycles with a median of eight cycles (range, two to 22 cycles) per patient. Thirteen patients (57%; exact 95% CI, 34.5% to 76.8%) had partial responses, six patients (26%) had stable disease, and four patients (17%) had progressive disease. Median time to progression and duration of response were 5.5 and 5.6 months, respectively. Four patients required dose reductions for neutropenia, neuropathy, or fatigue. Grade 3 or 4 toxicities included neutropenia (22%), fatigue (13%), anorexia (9%), and motor neuropathy (4%). Thirty-nine percent of patients experienced grade 1, 13% experienced grade 2, and none experienced grade 3/4 sensory neuropathy. The six patients with paired biopsies all had increases in tumor alpha-tubulin acetylation after treatment. Baseline or cycle 2 acetylated alpha-tubulin, tau-1, or p53 expression did not correlate with clinical response. CONCLUSION: Women with metastatic breast cancer previously untreated with taxanes have a meaningful durable response to single-agent ixabepilone therapy. Minimal hematologic toxicity and no grade 3 sensory neuropathy were noted.


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