Progression-Free Survival as a Surrogate End Point for Overall Survival in First-Line Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma: An Individual Patient–Level Analysis of Multiple Randomized Trials (SEAL)

Author:

Shi Qian1,Schmitz Norbert1,Ou Fang-Shu1,Dixon Jesse G.1,Cunningham David1,Pfreundschuh Michael1,Seymour John F.1,Jaeger Ulrich1,Habermann Thomas M.1,Haioun Corinne1,Tilly Hervé1,Ghesquieres Hervé1,Merli Francesco1,Ziepert Marita1,Herbrecht Raoul1,Flament Jocelyne1,Fu Tommy1,Coiffier Bertrand1,Flowers Christopher R.1

Affiliation:

1. Qian Shi, Fang-Shu Ou, Jesse G. Dixon, and Thomas M. Habermann, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN; Norbert Schmitz, University of Muenster, Muenster; Michael Pfreundschuh, Universität des Saarlandes, Homburg; Marita Ziepert, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany; David Cunningham, The Royal Marsden Hospital, Surrey, United Kingdom; John F. Seymour, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre and University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Ulrich Jaeger, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; Corinne...

Abstract

Purpose Overall survival (OS) is the definitive and best-established primary efficacy end point to evaluate diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) therapies, but it requires prolonged follow-up. An earlier end point assessed post-treatment would expedite clinical trial conduct and accelerate patient access to effective new therapies. Our objective was to formally evaluate progression-free survival (PFS) and PFS at 24 months (PFS24) as surrogate end points for OS in first-line DLBCL. Patients and Methods Individual patient data were analyzed from 7,507 patients from 13 multicenter randomized controlled trials of active treatment in previously untreated DLBCL, published after 2002, with sufficient PFS data to predict treatment effects on OS. Trial-level surrogacy examining the correlation of treatment effect estimates of PFS/PFS24 and OS was evaluated using both linear regression ( R2WLS) and Copula bivariable ( R2Copula) models. Prespecified criteria for surrogacy required either R2WLS or R2Copula ≥ 0.80 and neither < 0.7, with lower-bound 95% CI > 0.60. Results Trial-level surrogacy for PFS was strong ( R2WLS = 0.83; R2Copula = 0.85) and met the predefined criteria for surrogacy. At the patient level, PFS strongly correlated with OS. The surrogate threshold effect had a hazard ratio of 0.89. Surrogacy was consistent across comparisons with or without rituximab and with rituximab maintenance trials. Trial-level surrogacy for PFS24 was relatively strong ( R2WLS = 0.77; R2Copula = 0.78) but did not meet prespecified criteria. At the patient level, PFS24 significantly correlated with OS. The surrogate threshold effect had an odds ratio of 1.51. Conclusion This large pooled analysis of individual patient data supports PFS as a surrogate end point for OS in future randomized controlled trials evaluating chemoimmunotherapy in DLBCL. Use of this end point may expedite therapeutic development with the intent of bringing novel therapies to this patient population years before OS results are mature.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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