| October 26, 2010 |
| May 1, 2013 |
| September 2010 |
| September 2014 (final data collection date for primary outcome measure) |
| 1) Progression free survival using AZD6244 + erlotinib in wild type KRAS advanced NSCLC; and 2) Clinical response rate using AZD6244 monotherapy or AZD6244 + erlotinib combination therapy in KRAS mutant advanced NSCLC |
| Not Provided |
| Complete list of historical versions of study NCT01229150 on ClinicalTrials.gov Archive Site |
| 1) Clinical response rate and disease control rate in wild type KRAS; 2) Progression free survival and disease control rate in mutated KRAS; 3) Safety profile of combination therapyAZD6244 + erlotinib; and 4) overall survival. |
| Not Provided |
| Not Provided |
| Not Provided |
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| Randomized Phase II Study of AZD6244 (Mitogen-activated Protein Kinase Inhibitor) MEK-Inhibitor With Erlotinib in KRAS Wild Type Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) and a Randomized Phase II Study of AZD6244 With Erlotinib in Mutant KRAS Adva... |
| Randomized Phase II Study of AZD6244 MEK-Inhibitor With Erlotinib in KRAS Wild Type and KRAS Mutant Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer |
Background:
AZD6244 is an investigational anticancer drug that is designed to block a critical component (MEK) of a pathway (MAP kinase pathway) that causes some lung cancer cells to grow. The MAP kinase pathway could be overactive in a proportion of lung cancers, including some which also have another mutation in a protein known as KRAS. Approximately 20% of lung cancers have KRAS mutations which can make some cancer treatments-including erlotinib, a standard anticancer treatment drug-less effective. Researchers are interested in determining whether AZD6244 is effective in treating advanced NSCLC, including KRAS mutated lung cancer that has not responded to standard therapy.
Objectives:
To determine the effectiveness of AZD6244, either alone or in combination with erlotinib, in preventing tumor growth in individuals with NSCLC.
Eligibility:
Individuals at least 18 years of age who have been diagnosed with advanced NSCLC that has not responded to standard therapy.
Design:
- Participants will be screened with a medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies, and potentially, tumor biopsy tests to determine whether a participant's NSCLC contains mutations in the KRAS protein.
- Participants will be divided into two groups based on the status of the KRAS protein in their NSCLC tumor cells:
- Individuals with normal KRAS protein: Half will receive AZD6244 and erlotinib, and half will receive only erlotinib.
- Individuals with mutated KRAS protein: Half will receive AZD6244 and erlotinib, and half will receive only AZD6244.
- Participants will take their assigned medications daily (on an empty stomach in the morning and/or evening, depending on the treatment) for 28-day cycles of treatment. Participants will also keep a medication diary to record any side effects.
- Participants will have frequent blood tests during the first cycle of treatment, and will have imaging studies or other tests as required by the study researchers. Participants may also have an additional tumor biopsy after the end of the first treatment cycle.
- Treatment will continue until the disease progresses, significant side effects develop, the participant chooses to leave the study, or the researchers end the study....
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Background:
Lung Cancer is the leading cause of death among both men and women. Of the approximately 172,000 patients that are diagnosed every year with non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in the US, 55% present with advanced stage disease. The current treatment for advanced NSCLC is first line chemotherapy with a platinum-based doublet. Second line treatment for recurrent or progressive disease includes treatment with chemotherapy or treatment with an oral EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Several mechanisms of resistance to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors have been discovered. Presence of KRAS mutations is one of them. AZD6244 is an investigational drug that is orally available and targets the critical kinase (MEK) in the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase signal transduction pathway which is activated in NSCLC and is downstream of EGFR.
Objectives:
- Determine the progression free survival (PFS) using the combination of AZD6244 and erlotinib in patients with wild type KRAS advanced NSCLC
- Determine the clinical response rate (PR+CR) either monotherapy AZD6244 or the combination AZD6244 plus erlotinib in patients with mutated KRAS advanced NSCLC
- Evaluate disease control rate (PR+CR+SD) and overall survival in both patient groups.
- Determine a safety profile for use of AZD6244 in combination with erlotinib in patients with advanced NSCLC.
- Measure serological markers to evaluate if these markers are correlated with tumor response.
- Measure changes in a tumor's MIB-1 (Ki-67) rate and pERK levels in response to treatment with AZD6244.
Eligibility:
- Patients with pathologically confirmed NSCLC not amenable to potentially curative therapy and having progressed after being treated with at least one prior platinum containing chemotherapy regimen, or having refused cytotoxic chemotherapy.
- Progressive disease should be documented prior to enrollment on the study.
- Patient should not have more than 2 prior chemotherapy regimens.
- Measurable disease by RECIST criteria.
- Adequate renal, cardiac, hepatic and hematopoietic functions
- No major surgery, radiotherapy, or chemotherapy within 28 days of enrollment.
Design:
- Patients will be stratified on the basis on their KRAS mutational status. Wild-Type KRAS patients will be randomized to receive either single agent erlotinib 150 mg/day or the combination of erlotinib 100 mg/day plus AZD6244 at 150 mg/day. KRAS mutant patients will be randomized to receive AZD6244 monotherapy at a dose of 75 mg twice per day, or the combination AZD6244 at 150 mg/day plus erlotinib 100 mg/day.
- Treatment will continue until disease progression.
- Toxicity will be assessed every cycle by the CTCAE Version 4.0.
- Tumor assessments by RECIST 1.1 criteria will be performed every 2 cycles (one cycle is 28 days).
- Correlative studies including initial tumor mutational analysis and tissue immunohistochemistry (IHC) studies will be done on existing tumor blocks, or re-biopsied tissue prior to enrollment.
- Patients will be evaluated for the potential to undergo repeat tumor biopsy after 1 cycle of therapy. Tumors will be assessed for MIB-1 (Ki-67) and pERK levels by IHC.
- The study will accrue up to 40 patients with wild-type KRAS NSCLC and up to 60 patients with mutated KRAS NSCLC.
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| Interventional |
| Phase 2 |
Allocation: Randomized Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment Masking: Open Label Primary Purpose: Treatment |
| Non Small Cell Lung Carcinoma |
- Drug: AZD6244
75 mg BID
- Drug: Erlotinib
150 mg QD
- Drug: AZD6244 + Erlotinib
150 mg QD/100 mg QD
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- Jemal A, Siegel R, Ward E, Hao Y, Xu J, Thun MJ. Cancer statistics, 2009. CA Cancer J Clin. 2009 Jul-Aug;59(4):225-49. Epub 2009 May 27.
- Carbone DP, Minna JD. Chemotherapy for non-small cell lung cancer. BMJ. 1995 Oct 7;311(7010):889-90. No abstract available.
- Rodriguez J, Cortes J, Calvo E, Azinovic I, Fernandez-Hildago O, Martinez-Monge R, Garzon C, de Irala J, Martinez-Aguillo M, Ramon Y Cajal T, Brugarolas A. Paclitaxel, cisplatin, and gemcitabine combination chemotherapy within a multidisciplinary therapeutic approach in metastatic nonsmall cell lung carcinoma. Cancer. 2000 Dec 15;89(12):2622-9.
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| |
| Recruiting |
| 100 |
| September 2014 |
| September 2014 (final data collection date for primary outcome measure) |
|
OR
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
- Patients who have had chemotherapy or radiotherapy within 4 weeks prior to entering the study or those who have not recovered to less than or equal to grade 1 toxicities from adverse events due to agents administered more than 4 weeks earlier.
- Patients may not be receiving any other investigational agents.
- In general, patients with known brain metastases should be excluded from this clinical trial because of their poor prognosis and because they often develop progressive neurologic dysfunction that would confound the evaluation of neurologic and other adverse events. However, patients who have completed primary treatment of their brain metastasis by surgery or radiotherapy and have been off steroids (with the exception of maintenance replacement steroids) and anti-seizure medications for greater than one month without progression of neurological symptoms are eligible for enrollment in this trial. Stability of treated brain metastases should be confirmed by repeat imaging studies (CT brain or MRI brain) performed at least one month after completion of treatment.
- Previous MEK inhibitor or prior treatment with EGFR TKI.
- Major surgery or significant traumatic injury occurring within 21 days prior to treatment.
- Abnormalities of the cornea based on history (e.g., dry eye syndrome, Sjogren's syndrome), congenital abnormality (e.g., Fuch's dystrophy), abnormal slit-lamp examination using a vital dye (e.g., fluorescein, Bengal-Rose), and/or an abnormal corneal sensitivity test (Schirmer test or similar tear production test).
- Gastrointestinal tract disease resulting in an inability to take oral medication or a requirement for IV alimentation, prior surgical procedures affecting absorption, or active peptic ulcer disease.
- Patients with uncontrolled hypertension already on optimal medication, patients with class II or greater heart failure, any current or prior history of cardiomyopathy. Patient with baseline LVEF less than 50%, atrial fibrillation, recent myocardial infarction, or unstable ischemic heart disease.
- Patients with QTc interval greater than 450 msecs or other factors that increase the risk of QT prolongation or arrhythmic events (e.g., heart failure, hypokalemia, family history of long QT interval syndrome) including heart failure that meets New York Heart Association (NYHA) class III and IV definitions are excluded. This does not include QTc prolongation secondary to a paced rhythm. If a patient has a paced rhythm, QTc levels less than or equal to 500 (Grade 1) are allowed and patients with QTc > 500 are excluded.
- Required use of a concomitant medication that can prolong the QT interval. A comprehensive list of agents with the potential to cause QTc prolongation can be found at http://www.arizonacert.org/medical-pros/drug-lists/drug-lists.htm.
- Refractory nausea and vomiting, chronic gastrointestinal diseases (e.g. inflammatory bowel disease), or significant bowel resection that would preclude adequate absorption.
- Uncontrolled intercurrent illness including, but not limited to, ongoing or active infection, Hepatitis B or C, symptomatic congestive heart failure, unstable angina pectoris, cardiac arrhythmia, or psychiatric illness/social situations that would limit compliance with study requirements.
- Pregnant women are excluded from this study because AZD6244 is a MEK- Inhibitor agent with the potential for teratogenic or abortifacient effects. Because there is an unknown but potential risk for adverse events in nursing infants secondary to treatment of the mother with AZD6244, breastfeeding should be discontinued if the mother is treated with AZD6244. These potential risks may also apply to other agents used in this study.
- HIV-positive patients on combination antiretroviral therapy are ineligible because of the potential for pharmacokinetic interactions with AZD6244. In addition, these patients are at increased risk of lethal infections when treated with marrow-suppressive therapy. Appropriate studies will be undertaken in patients receiving combination antiretroviral therapy when indicated.
INCLUSION OF WOMEN AND MINORITIES:
Both men and women and members of all races and ethnic groups are eligible for this trial. |
| Both |
| 18 Years and older |
| No |
|
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| United States |
| |
| NCT01229150 |
| 100218, 10-C-0218 |
| Not Provided
| National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC) ( National Cancer Institute (NCI) ) |
| National Cancer Institute (NCI) |
| Not Provided
| Principal Investigator: |
Arun Rajan, M.D. |
National Cancer Institute (NCI) |
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|
| National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC) |
| April 2013 |