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© 2003 American Society for Clinical Oncology Phase II Evaluation of Temozolomide and 13-cis-Retinoic Acid for the Treatment of Recurrent and Progressive Malignant Glioma: A North American Brain Tumor Consortium Study
From the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston; University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio; and University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX; University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI; Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA; University of Pittsburgh and Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA; University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles; University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CA; University of Chicago, Chicago, IL. Address reprint requests to Kurt A. Jaeckle, MD, Department of Oncology and Neurology, Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, 4500 San Pablo Blvd, Jacksonville, FL 32224; email: jaeckle.kurt{at}mayo.edu.
Purpose: Temozolomide (TMZ) and 13-cis-retinoic acid (cRA) have shown activity in prior single-agent trials of recurrent malignant gliomas (MG). This phase II trial evaluated efficacy and toxicity of combination temozolomide and cRA treatment in recurrent MG. Patients and Methods: Adults with recurrent supratentorial MG for whom surgery, radiation, and/or chemotherapy failed were eligible. Treatment included oral TMZ 150 or 200 mg/m2/d, days 1 through 5, and cRA 100 mg/m2/d, days 1 to 21, every 28 days. Primary end point was progression-free survival at 6 months (PFS 6); secondary end points included response, survival, and PFS12. Results: Eighty-eight eligible patients (glioblastoma multiforme [n = 40]; anaplastic gliomas [n = 48; astrocytoma, 28; oligodendroglioma, 14; mixed glioma, six]) received treatment. PFS 6 was 43% (95% confidence interval [CI], 33% to 54%) and PFS12 was 16% (95% CI, 10% to 26%). Median overall PFS was 19 weeks (95% CI, 16 to 27 weeks), and median overall survival (OS) was 47 weeks (95% CI, 36 to 58 weeks). OS was 46% (95% CI, 36% to 57%) at 52 weeks and 21% (95% CI, 13% to 31%) at 104 weeks. Of 84 assessable patients, there were two (3%) complete responses and eight (12%) partial responses (complete plus partial response, 15%). Among 499 treatment cycles, the most common grade 3/4 events included granulocytopenia (1.8%), thrombocytopenia (1.4%), and hypertriglyceridemia (1.2%). Conclusion: TMZ and cRA were active, exceeding our 20% thresholds for PFS 6 success, assuming 20% improvement over our previously reported database (glioblastoma multiforme: expected, 30%; observed, 32%; anaplastic glioma: expected, 40%; observed, 50%).
DESPITE OPTIMAL treatment for malignant gliomas, recurrence is common within the first 2 years. This poor outcome was underscored by a recent analysis of eight consecutive phase II trials of 375 patients with recurrent glioma treated with various chemotherapeutic regimens.1 This analysis revealed a 6-month progression-free survival rate (PFS 6) of only 15% for patients with glioblastoma multiforme (GM) and 31% for patients with anaplastic glioma (AG). After recurrence, response to treatment was observed in only 9% of patients, and overall median survival was only 30 weeks. In meta-analysis studies, there seems to be modest evidence of a survival benefit when chemotherapy is added to standard surgical and radiation therapy, particularly in selected subsets of newly diagnosed glioma patients.2,3 However, there is little evidence of benefit of chemotherapy after tumor recurrence or progression, and newer agents and regimens need evaluation. There is preclinical and clinical evidence of activity of retinoids and/or alkylators in gliomas, either as single agents or in combination. Two such orally administered agents with different modes of action, temozolomide (TMZ) and 13-cis-retinoic acid (cRA), have shown activity in recurrent malignant gliomas without overlapping toxicity in phase II clinical trials.46 Multiagent combination regimens containing both retinoids and alkylating agents have been active in malignancies of several histologic subtypes.710 On the basis of these observations, the North American Brain Tumor Consortium (NABTC) chose to perform a prospective, phase II, single-arm trial (NABTC 9803) of TMZ and cRA in patients with recurrent and progressive malignant gliomas.
The study was performed by the NABTC, a National Cancer Institute (NCI) consortium of 11 participating institutions (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, University of California at San Francisco, University of Michigan Hospital, University of Pittsburgh, Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh, University of Texas Health Sciences Center at San Antonio, University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, University of Texas Southwestern, University of Wisconsin, University of California at Los Angeles, and University of Chicago). The study was activated December 17, 1998 at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, was expanded to the NABTC on April 9, 1999, and was closed to accrual on January 30, 2000. All data were collected and analyzed at the NABTC Data Management Center at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. Approval of the protocol and informed consent by local human investigation committees was obtained from each institution, in accord with assurance filed with and approved by the United States Department of Health and Human Services where appropriate. Informed consent was obtained from each subject or subjects guardian.
Objectives and End Points
Patient Eligibility Patients were ineligible if they had active infection, were pregnant or breast feeding, or had history of a prior cancer (unless off therapy and in complete remission for > 3 years), excepting nonmelanotic skin cancer and carcinoma-in-situ of the cervix.
Toxicity and Quality Assurance Quality assurance measures included ongoing (per protocol timetable) monitoring of protocol compliance and submitted case report forms, on-site audits, and response reviews.
Treatment No dose escalations were allowed. Dose reduction for toxicity was allowed in 25-mg reduction increments, for both TMZ and cRA. Only two dose reductions were permitted, and patients having grade 3 toxicity of any type after two dose reductions were removed from study. Patients were pretreated with oral antiemetics before each TMZ dose and as needed symptomatically. Patients were required to maintain the lowest corticosteroid dose necessary for neurologic stability.
Response and Toxicity Response was assessed using a modification of the MacDonald criteria.11 All final response determinations required that patients had a stable or improved clinical examination as compared with baseline and were on stable or decreased doses of corticosteroids as compared with the prior evaluation. Responses (complete response [CR] or partial response [PR]) were required to be sustained on two successive scans taken 8 weeks apart to be considered valid. Independent central review was performed on all patients considered to be responding by the local investigators, and if the central reviewer was in agreement, response was designated as confirmed. If all relevant scans were not all available at the time of central review, the response was designated as unconfirmed. Progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were defined as the time from the first day of treatment until progression or death. Patients were removed from study if there was progressive disease, development of unacceptable toxicity, an unacceptable status quo or patient refusal, or noncompliance with protocol requirements.
Statistical Considerations
Eighty-nine patients with recurrent, progressive malignant gliomas were registered. Eighty-eight were eligible; one patient without demonstrable radiographic progression at registration was found to be ineligible. Of the 88 eligible, assessable patients, there were 40 patients with GM (one had gliosarcoma) and 48 patients with AG (28 patients with AA, 13 patients with anaplastic oligodendroglioma [AO], one with oligodendroglioma, and six with AMG).
The clinical and demographic features of the 88 patients are listed in Table 1
Response Of the 84 patients assessable for response (Table 2
Survival There were 88 eligible patients with recurrent supratentorial malignant gliomas (GM, n = 40; AG, n = 48) analyzed by intent to treat (Table 3
Analysis by histologic strata was also performed. In the 40 patients with GM, PFS 6 was 32% (95% CI, 21% to 51%) PFS 12 was 15% (95% CI, 7% to 31%), and median PFS was 16 weeks (95% CI, 9 to 26 weeks). The OS 6 for GM was 65% (95% CI, 52% to 82%), and median OS was 35 weeks (95% CI, 28 to 79 weeks). In the 48 patients with AG (non-GM), the PFS 6 was 50% (95% CI, 38% to 66%), PFS 12 was 17% (95% CI, 9% to 31%), and median PFS was 25 weeks (95% CI, 16 to 32 weeks). The OS 6 for all patients with AG was 83% (95% CI, 73% to 95%), and median OS was 52 weeks (95% CI, 38 to 60 weeks). For the subsets of AG, end point parameters for the AO and non-AO AG subsets are provided in more detail in Table 3
Treatment Intensity and Reasons for Removal From Study
Toxicity
The prognosis of patients with recurrent malignant astrocytoma remains poor. Wong et al1 published an analysis of clinical outcomes in 375 patients with recurrent malignant glioma (GM, 225; AG, 150) who received chemotherapy in eight consecutive prospective phase II trials. The overall 6-month PFS rate was only 31% and 15% for patients with recurrent AA and GBM, respectively. Because of these dismal results, there has been heightened interest in the investigation of new agents and combinations. TMZ is an orally bioavailable imidazotetrazine derivative of dacarbazine. TMZ undergoes chemical degradation to its active metabolite, monomethyl triazenoimidazole carboxamide, at physiologic pH.1214 Evidence to date suggests that cytotoxicity of monomethyl triazenoimidazole carboxamide is primarily due to methylation at the O6 position of guanine.1214 TMZ additionally acts as an inhibitor of DNA mismatch repair and can induce apoptosis.15 Additive or synergistic effects on growth inhibition have been reported in preclinical models, including cell lines and human glioma xenograft models.1620 Concentrations of TMZ in the CNS reach approximately 30% of plasma concentrations after systemic administration.21 TMZ has also shown evidence of activity in clinical trials of human malignant gliomas. Yung et al5 reported a CR + PR rate of 35%, a PFS 6 of 46%, and overall survival of 13.6 months in a phase II trial of TMZ in patients with recurrent AA. Another randomized study of 116 recurrent malignant glioma patients compared single-agent TMZ with procarbazine.4 In that study, PFS 6 of 21% was observed with TMZ, versus 8% with procarbazine (P = .008). Noncumulative myelosuppression, in the form of thrombocytopenia and neutropenia, was the dose-limiting toxicity in clinical studies.4,9 Subsequently, TMZ was conditionally approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration for the indication of treatment of recurrent AA. Synthetic retinoids induce apoptosis and differentiation while inhibiting cell proliferation.22 Inhibition of migration and proliferation has been observed after retinoic acid treatment in primary glioma cultures but to a lesser degree in established glioma lines.23 Inhibition of proliferation and induction of apoptosis in human glioma cell lines may be concentration dependent and involve signal transduction transcription factors.24 Trans-retinoic acid has been shown to downregulate leukemia inhibitory factor and telomerase activity, resulting in inhibition of tumor growth and producing differentiation effects in medulloblastoma cells.25 Retinoic acid also inhibits tenascin-C expression in C6 glioma cell lines.26 cRA modulates nuclear retinoic acid receptor and the alpha and beta retinoid x-receptors in glioma cell lines.27 Binding of retinoids to the nuclear retinoic acid receptor and retinoid x-receptor produces a downstream decrease in hepatocyte growth factor expression, interrupting a potential autocrine proliferative loop; hepatocyte growth factor and the related c-Met receptor is present in high levels in human gliomas.28 Antitumor activity of retinoic acid has been observed in the GL-15 glioblastoma29 and the U343 malignant glioma cell lines.30 Pharmacokinetic studies have shown that adequate concentrations of cRA can be reached in rodent CNS after systemic administration, but with a relatively short terminal half-life in rat brain tissue (0.57 to 1.02 hours).31 These data support a schedule of frequent or continuous oral dosing of cRA in human clinical trials. A prior phase II trial (Radiation Therapy Oncology Group 9113) of all-trans-retinoic acid in 30 patients with recurrent malignant glioma disclosed minor activity, with tolerable side effects; a response rate of 12% was observed, with a median time to progression of 3.8 months and a median OS of 5.7 months.32 A similar single-institution phase II trial of all-trans-retinoic acid in 36 patients with recurrent glioma did not show much evidence of activity, with a 3% minor response rate, and median time to progression of only 8 weeks.33 A recent phase II trial of the combination of radiotherapy and cRA plus interferon alfa-2a in patients with newly diagnosed high-grade glioma did not show an improvement in survival as compared with historical controls.34 Yung et al6 conducted a phase II prospective study of 43 patients with recurrent malignant glioma treated with cRA as a single agent, administered at a daily oral dose of 60 to 100 mg/m2/d for 3 weeks, followed by 1 week of rest every 28 days. A response rate of 23% (PR, 7%; minor response, 16%) was observed, with median time to progression of 16 weeks and median survival of 58 weeks for GM and 34 weeks for AA. Clinical trials of combination chemotherapy with retinoids and alkylating agents have shown activity in recurrent squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck, nonsmall-cell lung carcinoma, pancreatic cancer, and childhood and acute promyelocytic leukemia.710 It was our hypothesis that the combination of TMZ and cRA would have therapeutic potential in glioma, based on observations of preclinical and clinical activity with each agent, different mechanisms of action, and predominantly nonoverlapping toxicity profiles. The current study was a modestly sized (N = 88) single-arm prospective trial, with separate stratification for GM and AG. The patient accrual numbers were derived from a hypothesis that a 20% improvement in PFS 6 would be observed with the combination of TMZ and cRA for both strata, based on data from the historical database.1 In our study, for all patients, the PFS 6 was 43%. PFS 6 was 32% for GM and 50% for all AG combined (46% for the non-AO AG subset and 61% for pure AO subset). These results, as compared with the PFS 6 observed in the database (GM, 15%; AG, 31%), met the criteria for PFS 6 success, exceeding the 20% improvement for both the GM and AG strata. At the time of design of the current protocol, the PFS 6 for TMZ alone was not yet reported; subsequent clinical trials of single-agent TMZ reported a PFS 6 of 21% for GM and 44% for AA.4,5 An interesting aspect of this study involved the group of patients with pure AO. In this group, the PFS 6 was 62%, and OS was 55 weeks. A prior study of TMZ in treatment of 30 patients with recurrent AO showed a response rate of 30%.35 Although specific survival end points were not reported, 13 (44%) of the AO patients were progression-free at 6 months. Although direct comparisons are not possible, the greater survival noted with the TMZ/cRA combination in this trial deserves further study. In addition, survival of the recurrent AO cohort was much longer than the GM and non-AO AG cohorts, raising the question of whether the AO patients should be stratified separately. Caution is advised with regard to statistical comparisons of these uncontrolled results with the historical database1 or prior TMZ trials.4,5 Nevertheless, the results from the current phase II trial suggest that the combination of TMZ and cRA may be a more active regimen in recurrent malignant gliomas.
This research protocol was supported grants CA62399, CA62422, CA62412, CA16672, CA62455, CA62426, UO1CA62407-08, UO1CA62405, UO1CA62399, UO1CA62421, MO1-RR00079, MO1-RR00633, MO1-RR00056, MO1-RR0865, MO1-RR00042, and MO1-RR03186 from the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.
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35. Van den Bent MJ, Keime-Guiebert F, Brandes AA, et al: Temozolomide chemotherapy in recurrent oligodendroglioma. Neurology 57:340342, 2001 Submitted December 17, 2002; accepted March 26, 2003. This article has been cited by other articles:
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Copyright © 2003 by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Online ISSN: 1527-7755. Print ISSN: 0732-183X
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