Phase II Clinical Trial of Ixabepilone (BMS-247550), an Epothilone B Analog, in Patients With Taxane-Resistant Metastatic Breast Cancer
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Published:2007-08-10
Issue:23
Volume:25
Page:3399-3406
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ISSN:0732-183X
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Container-title:Journal of Clinical Oncology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:JCO
Author:
Thomas Eva1, Tabernero Josep1, Fornier Monica1, Conté Pierfranco1, Fumoleau Pierre1, Lluch Ana1, Vahdat Linda T.1, Bunnell Craig A.1, Burris Howard A.1, Viens Patrice1, Baselga José1, Rivera Edgardo1, Guarneri Valentina1, Poulart Valerie1, Klimovsky Judith1, Lebwohl David1, Martin Miguel1
Affiliation:
1. From The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX; Medical Oncology Department, Vall d'Hebron University Hospital, Barcelona; Servicio Oncologia, Hospital Clinico Universitario, Valencia; Hospital Clinico San Carlos, Prof Martin Lagos S/N, Madrid, Spain; Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY; Department of Oncology and Hematology, University Hospital, Modena, Italy; Centre Georges-François Leclerc, Dijon, France; Weill Cornell Medical College/New York Presbyterian...
Abstract
Purpose Ixabepilone (BMS-247550) is an epothilone analog that optimizes the properties of naturally occurring epothilone B. Natural epothilones and their analogs promote tumor cell death by binding to tubulin and stabilizing microtubules, causing apoptosis. This international phase II trial assessed the activity of ixabepilone in patients with metastatic breast cancer (MBC) that was resistant to taxane therapy. Patients and Methods MBC patients, who had experienced disease progression while receiving or within 4 months of taxane therapy (6 months if adjuvant taxane only), and who had a taxane as their last regimen, received ixabepilone (1- or 3-hour infusion of 50 mg/m2 or 3-hour infusion of 40 mg/m2 every 3 weeks). Results Of 49 patients treated with 40 mg/m2 ixabepilone during 3 hours, 35 (73%) had experienced disease progression within 1 month of their last taxane dose. The response rate was 12% (95% CI, 4.7% to 26.5%). All responses (n = 6) were partial; five of six patients had not responded to prior taxane therapy. In responders, the median response duration was 10.4 months. In 20 patients (41%), stable disease was the best outcome. Median time to progression was 2.2 months (95% CI, 1.4 to 3.2 months); median survival was 7.9 months. For treated patients across all cohorts (intent-to-treat population), the response rate was also 12% (eight of 66). Treatment-related adverse events in the study were manageable and primarily grade 1/2. Treatment-related neuropathy was mostly sensory and mild to moderate. Conclusion Ixabepilone (40 mg/m2 as a 3-hour infusion every 3 weeks) demonstrates promising antitumor activity and an acceptable safety profile in patients with taxane-resistant MBC.
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology
Reference28 articles.
1. Survival of metastatic breast carcinoma patients over a 20-year period 2. Chemotherapy: What Progress in the Last 5 Years? 3. Lee FY, Borzilleri R, Fairchild CR, et al: BMS-247550: a novel epothilone analog with a mode of action similar to paclitaxel but possessing superior antitumor efficacy. Clin Cancer Res 7:1429,2001-1437, 4. Phase II Clinical Trial of Ixabepilone (BMS-247550), an Epothilone B Analog, in Metastatic and Locally Advanced Breast Cancer 5. Jordan MA, Miller H, Ni L, et al: The Pat-21 breast cancer model derived from a patient with primary Taxol resistance recapitulates the phenotype of its origin, has altered beta-tubulin expression and is sensitive to ixabepilone. Proc Am Assoc Cancer Res 47:73,2006, (abstr LB-280)
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