Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant...

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Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin Stockler, Corona Gainford, Julie Martyn, Amit Oza, Heidi Donovan, Brigitte Miller and Madeline King

Transcript of Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant...

Page 1: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer

Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin Stockler, Corona Gainford, Julie Martyn, Amit

Oza, Heidi Donovan, Brigitte Miller and Madeline King

Page 2: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Chemotherapy in platinum resistant/refractory ovarian cancer

What do we know and What don’t we know?

● Goal- palliation and symptom control● Objective response rates are low● Benefits as well as adverse side effects of

treatment● How to best measure benefit● How does objective response correlate with

symptom benefit● What % are symptomatic at the time of treatment● Do these symptoms improve

Page 3: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

But ….still many Questions !!

● Impact of treatment on HRQOL

● Which instruments do we use

● How important is hope in decision making?

● Would good palliative care achieve the same

● How much time do patients spend in hospital as a result of toxicity

● How many patients receive treatment within 30 days of death

● Can we identify patients most likely to benefit

Page 4: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Platinum Resistant Ovarian Cancer

• Patients on clinical trial not necessarily representative of the population as a whole

• Better Performance Status/younger etc

• Objective response rates generally low -in order of 10-15%

• Not clear whether symptoms improve and what price they pay for treatment

Page 5: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Copyright © American Society of Clinical Oncology

Gordon, A. N. et al. J Clin Oncol; 19:3312-3322 2001

Median TTP- 9 vs. 13 w (NS)

Sobering reminder of the results of treatment

Kaplan-Meier curve of PFS ( platinum-resistant patients)

Response Rates 6.5% vs. 12.3% ( NS)

260 patients on study

Median Survival 35 w vs. 41 w ( NS)

Page 6: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Response Rates Symptom Control and QOL

● Response rates crude way to measure benefit● Doyle et al reported improved QOL and

emotional well being in 50-60% of patients receiving 2nd line treatment while ORR was 25%

● Large study using EORTC QLQ-C-30 in 500 women with recurrent ovarian cancer reported no change in QOL during treatment- i.e. no change from baseline, after 3 cycles and at completion of therapy

Page 7: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Chemotherapy versus hormonal treatment in patients with platinum and taxane resistant ovarian cancer- a NSGO study (NSGO-OC-0101)

On behalf of NSGO

G. B. Kristensen, J. Kaern, E. Åvall-Lundqvist, R. dePont Christensen, S. Grenman, M. Bergdahl, R. Sandvei, M. Baekelandt, T. Skeie-Jensen,M. Kalling, T. Hoegberg,

Presented IGCS Bangkok 2008

Page 8: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

0.00

0.25

0.50

0.75

1.00

0 10 20 30 40months

Chemotherapy, median time to progression: 87 daysTamoxifen, median time to progression: 62 days

HR: 0.72, 95% CI: 0.55 - 0.96, p=0.024

Progression free survivalProgression free survival

NSGO-OC-0101Kristenson G 2008

Page 9: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Overall Quality of life score EORTC QOL-C30 + OV28

Overall Quality of life score EORTC QOL-C30 + OV28

Basis Mean Max

Tamoxifen 48.6 46.1 54.9

W-paclitaxel 54.8 48.7 56.6

Peg. Doxo 49.3 45.2 57.0

No significant differences between treatment groups

NSGO-OC-0101Kristenson G 2008

Page 10: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Possible interpretation…

● 'Global QOL scale may not be sensitive enough to pick up differences'

● There must be better ways to measure symptom control and palliative benefit

Page 11: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

FOSI 8 items (subset of FACT-O), 1 scale

Page 12: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Makhija S et al. ProcASCO 2007;Abstract 5507

Page 13: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

GCIG Symptom Control Study

HYPOTHESES

● The subjective improvement of palliative chemotherapy and clinical benefit will be significantly greater than objective response rates.

● Clinical benefit measures that incorporate both objective response and subjective improvement will provide a more meaningful method of evaluating the effect of palliative chemotherapy

● It should be possible to identify which patients are more likely to benefit from palliative chemotherapy as well as the group who have little benefit i.e develop a prognostic index/score

Page 14: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Study Schema

REGISTER

Target Population

>18yrs

platinum resistant/ refractory epithelial ovarian cancer/ > 3 LINES

ECOG 0-3

Able to commence treatment within 2wks of registration

Sufficient English language skills to complete QoL formsindependently

Stage1100 patients

• Complete 7 QoL forms• 20 subjects will participate in additional QoL telephone interview

Data Collection

4 Treatment

cycles or

Disease progression

Page 15: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Primary Objective● To determine the proportion of women benefiting from palliative chemotherapy

as defined by a clinically significant improvement in HRQL scores and symptom benefit as well as objective response.

Develop a better measure of symptom benefit for clinical trials Secondary Objectives● The proportion of women who receive treatment because they are (a)

symptomatic, (b) have rising tumor markers alone, and or (c) have imaging evidence of disease progression alone.

● The most common and important symptoms as defined by the patients themselves.

● Whether these patient defined symptoms improve with chemotherapy● Whether improvements in symptoms and HRQL correlate with objective

response. ● The effects of treatment, objective response and subjective response on scores for

anxiety, depression and hope.● Derive a prognostic index to better predict outcomes and likelihood of benefit

STAGE 2 400 -500 patients

Page 16: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Hypothetical Risk Groups

Page 17: Measuring the benefit of palliative chemotherapy in women with platinum refractory/ resistant ovarian cancer Michael Friedlander Phyllis Butow, Martin.

Conclusions- with respect to study● General:

– QOL measures result in a lot of data and outcome variables to analyse & interpret– The relationship among them is complicated– Particularly so for the relationship between specific symptoms and overall QOL– Potential diluting effects with the more expansive/inclusive definitions & measures of

QOL– Important to focus on the symptoms that really matter to patients in a particular

context and whether they improve● In the context of palliative chemo for platinum refractory/resistant ovarian

cancer:– FOSI appears to have the right content & mix for a single index measure – Likely to sensitive to palliative benefits of therapy

AND to deterioration due to disease progression

● We will explore all these questions in depth in our study