Adaptive Randomization of Veliparib–Carboplatin Treatment in Breast Cancer

Hope S. Rugo(University of California System), Olufunmilayo I. Olopade(University of California System), Angela DeMichele(University of California System), Christina Yau(Buck Institute for Research on Aging), Laura van ‘t Veer, Meredith Buxton(University of California System), Michael Hogarth(University of California System), Nola M. Hylton(University of California System), Melissa Paoloni(University of California System), Jane Perlmutter(University of California System), W. Fraser Symmans(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Douglas Yee(University of Minnesota System), A. Jo Chien(University of California System), Anne M. Wallace(University of California System), Henry G. Kaplan(University of California System), Judy C. Boughey(Mayo Clinic), Tufia C. Haddad(Mayo Clinic), Kathy S. Albain(Loyola University Chicago), Minetta C. Liu(University of California System), Claudine Isaacs(University of California System), Qamar J. Khan(University of Kansas), Julie E. Lang(University of Arizona), Rebecca K. Viscusi(University of Arizona), Lajos Pusztai(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Stacy L. Moulder(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Jane Yuet Ching Hui(Oregon Health & Science University), Kathleen Kemmer(Oregon Health & Science University), Anthony Elias(University of Denver), Kirsten K. Edmiston(Inova Fairfax Hospital), David Euhus(University of California System), Barbara Haley(University of California System), Rita Nanda(University of California System), Donald W. Northfelt(University of California System), Debasish Tripathy(University of Southern California), William C. Wood(Emory University), Cheryl A. Ewing(University of California System), Richard B. Schwab(University of California System), Julia Lyandres(University of California System), Sarah Davis(University of California System), Gillian L. Hirst(University of California System), Ashish Sanil(University of California System), Donald A. Berry(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Laura J. Esserman(University of California System)
New England Journal of Medicine
July 6, 2016
Cited by 551Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The genetic and clinical heterogeneity of breast cancer makes the identification of effective therapies challenging. We designed I-SPY 2, a phase 2, multicenter, adaptively randomized trial to screen multiple experimental regimens in combination with standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer. The goal is to match experimental regimens with responding cancer subtypes. We report results for veliparib, a poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor, combined with carboplatin. METHODS: In this ongoing trial, women are eligible for participation if they have stage II or III breast cancer with a tumor 2.5 cm or larger in diameter; cancers are categorized into eight biomarker subtypes on the basis of status with regard to human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), hormone receptors, and a 70-gene assay. Patients undergo adaptive randomization within each biomarker subtype to receive regimens that have better performance than the standard therapy. Regimens are evaluated within 10 biomarker signatures (i.e., prospectively defined combinations of biomarker subtypes). Veliparib-carboplatin plus standard therapy was considered for HER2-negative tumors and was therefore evaluated in 3 signatures. The primary end point is pathological complete response. Tumor volume changes measured by magnetic resonance imaging during treatment are used to predict whether a patient will have a pathological complete response. Regimens move on from phase 2 if and when they have a high Bayesian predictive probability of success in a subsequent phase 3 neoadjuvant trial within the biomarker signature in which they performed well. RESULTS: With regard to triple-negative breast cancer, veliparib-carboplatin had an 88% predicted probability of success in a phase 3 trial. A total of 72 patients were randomly assigned to receive veliparib-carboplatin, and 44 patients were concurrently assigned to receive control therapy; at the completion of chemotherapy, the estimated rates of pathological complete response in the triple-negative population were 51% (95% Bayesian probability interval [PI], 36 to 66%) in the veliparib-carboplatin group versus 26% (95% PI, 9 to 43%) in the control group. The toxicity of veliparib-carboplatin was greater than that of the control. CONCLUSIONS: The process used in our trial showed that veliparib-carboplatin added to standard therapy resulted in higher rates of pathological complete response than standard therapy alone specifically in triple-negative breast cancer. (Funded by the QuantumLeap Healthcare Collaborative and others; I-SPY 2 TRIAL ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01042379.).


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