Cargando…

Ramucirumab in Indian Patients with Advanced Gastric Cancer—Does Borderline Performance Status and Heavy Burden of Disease in Real World Practice Impact Clinical Benefit?

Background  Ramucirumab is considered a standard of care as second-line therapy (CT2) in advanced gastric cancers (AGCs). The aim of this study was to assess practice patterns and outcomes with ramucirumab among Indian patients with AGCs. Materials and Methods  A computerized clinical data entry for...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ramaswamy, Anant, Bajaj, Kripa, Talwar, Vineet, Prabhash, Kumar, Batra, Ullas, Dhabhar, Boman, Sharma, Mansi, Ghadyalpatil, Nikhil, CT, Satish, Goyal, Gautam, Muzamil, Javvid, Bhatt, Amit, Jain, Parveen, Ranade, Anantbhushan, Kamath, Mangesh, Gawande, Jayant Pundlik, Thippeswamy, Ravi, Mirani, Jimmy, Reddy, Neelesh, Ganguly, Sandip, Mishra, Sourav Kumar, Madabhavi, Irappa, HP, Shashidhara, Panda, Soumya Surath, Patil, Shekar, Bhargava, Prabhat, Ostwal, Vikas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd. 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9273313/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35833042
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0041-1728980
_version_ 1784745045095612416
author Ramaswamy, Anant
Bajaj, Kripa
Talwar, Vineet
Prabhash, Kumar
Batra, Ullas
Dhabhar, Boman
Sharma, Mansi
Ghadyalpatil, Nikhil
CT, Satish
Goyal, Gautam
Muzamil, Javvid
Bhatt, Amit
Jain, Parveen
Ranade, Anantbhushan
Kamath, Mangesh
Gawande, Jayant Pundlik
Thippeswamy, Ravi
Mirani, Jimmy
Reddy, Neelesh
Ganguly, Sandip
Mishra, Sourav Kumar
Madabhavi, Irappa
HP, Shashidhara
Panda, Soumya Surath
Patil, Shekar
Bhargava, Prabhat
Ostwal, Vikas
author_facet Ramaswamy, Anant
Bajaj, Kripa
Talwar, Vineet
Prabhash, Kumar
Batra, Ullas
Dhabhar, Boman
Sharma, Mansi
Ghadyalpatil, Nikhil
CT, Satish
Goyal, Gautam
Muzamil, Javvid
Bhatt, Amit
Jain, Parveen
Ranade, Anantbhushan
Kamath, Mangesh
Gawande, Jayant Pundlik
Thippeswamy, Ravi
Mirani, Jimmy
Reddy, Neelesh
Ganguly, Sandip
Mishra, Sourav Kumar
Madabhavi, Irappa
HP, Shashidhara
Panda, Soumya Surath
Patil, Shekar
Bhargava, Prabhat
Ostwal, Vikas
author_sort Ramaswamy, Anant
collection PubMed
description Background  Ramucirumab is considered a standard of care as second-line therapy (CT2) in advanced gastric cancers (AGCs). The aim of this study was to assess practice patterns and outcomes with ramucirumab among Indian patients with AGCs. Materials and Methods  A computerized clinical data entry form was formulated by the coordinating center's (Tata Memorial Hospital) medical oncologists and disseminated through personal contacts at academic conferences as well as via email for anonymized patient data entry. The data was analyzed for clinical characteristics, response rates, and survival outcomes. Results  A total of 26 physicians contributed data, resulting in 55 patients receiving ramucirumab and being available for analysis. Median age was 53 years (range: 26–78), 69.1% of patients had greater than two sites of disease, and baseline Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group's performance score (ECOG PS) ≥ 2 was seen in 61.8% of patients. Ramucirumab was used as monotherapy in 10.9% of patients, while the remaining 89.1% received ramucirumab combined with chemotherapy. Median event-free survival (EFS) and median overall survival (OS) with ramucirumab were3.53 months (95% CI: 2.5–4.57) and 5.7 months (95% CI: 2.39–9.0), respectively. Common class specific grade adverse events seen with ramucirumab included gastrointestinal (GI) hemorrhage (9.1% - all grades) and uncontrolled hypertension (Grade 3/4 - 3.6%). Conclusions  Ramucirumab appears to have similar efficacy in Indian AGC patients when compared with real-world data from other countries in terms of median EFS, but OS appears inferior due to more patients having borderline ECOG PS and high metastatic disease burden. GI hemorrhages appear more common than published data, although not unequivocally related to ramucirumab.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9273313
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-92733132022-07-12 Ramucirumab in Indian Patients with Advanced Gastric Cancer—Does Borderline Performance Status and Heavy Burden of Disease in Real World Practice Impact Clinical Benefit? Ramaswamy, Anant Bajaj, Kripa Talwar, Vineet Prabhash, Kumar Batra, Ullas Dhabhar, Boman Sharma, Mansi Ghadyalpatil, Nikhil CT, Satish Goyal, Gautam Muzamil, Javvid Bhatt, Amit Jain, Parveen Ranade, Anantbhushan Kamath, Mangesh Gawande, Jayant Pundlik Thippeswamy, Ravi Mirani, Jimmy Reddy, Neelesh Ganguly, Sandip Mishra, Sourav Kumar Madabhavi, Irappa HP, Shashidhara Panda, Soumya Surath Patil, Shekar Bhargava, Prabhat Ostwal, Vikas South Asian J Cancer Background  Ramucirumab is considered a standard of care as second-line therapy (CT2) in advanced gastric cancers (AGCs). The aim of this study was to assess practice patterns and outcomes with ramucirumab among Indian patients with AGCs. Materials and Methods  A computerized clinical data entry form was formulated by the coordinating center's (Tata Memorial Hospital) medical oncologists and disseminated through personal contacts at academic conferences as well as via email for anonymized patient data entry. The data was analyzed for clinical characteristics, response rates, and survival outcomes. Results  A total of 26 physicians contributed data, resulting in 55 patients receiving ramucirumab and being available for analysis. Median age was 53 years (range: 26–78), 69.1% of patients had greater than two sites of disease, and baseline Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group's performance score (ECOG PS) ≥ 2 was seen in 61.8% of patients. Ramucirumab was used as monotherapy in 10.9% of patients, while the remaining 89.1% received ramucirumab combined with chemotherapy. Median event-free survival (EFS) and median overall survival (OS) with ramucirumab were3.53 months (95% CI: 2.5–4.57) and 5.7 months (95% CI: 2.39–9.0), respectively. Common class specific grade adverse events seen with ramucirumab included gastrointestinal (GI) hemorrhage (9.1% - all grades) and uncontrolled hypertension (Grade 3/4 - 3.6%). Conclusions  Ramucirumab appears to have similar efficacy in Indian AGC patients when compared with real-world data from other countries in terms of median EFS, but OS appears inferior due to more patients having borderline ECOG PS and high metastatic disease burden. GI hemorrhages appear more common than published data, although not unequivocally related to ramucirumab. Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd. 2021-09-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9273313/ /pubmed/35833042 http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0041-1728980 Text en MedIntel Services Pvt Ltd. This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ ) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License, which permits unrestricted reproduction and distribution, for non-commercial purposes only; and use and reproduction, but not distribution, of adapted material for non-commercial purposes only, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Ramaswamy, Anant
Bajaj, Kripa
Talwar, Vineet
Prabhash, Kumar
Batra, Ullas
Dhabhar, Boman
Sharma, Mansi
Ghadyalpatil, Nikhil
CT, Satish
Goyal, Gautam
Muzamil, Javvid
Bhatt, Amit
Jain, Parveen
Ranade, Anantbhushan
Kamath, Mangesh
Gawande, Jayant Pundlik
Thippeswamy, Ravi
Mirani, Jimmy
Reddy, Neelesh
Ganguly, Sandip
Mishra, Sourav Kumar
Madabhavi, Irappa
HP, Shashidhara
Panda, Soumya Surath
Patil, Shekar
Bhargava, Prabhat
Ostwal, Vikas
Ramucirumab in Indian Patients with Advanced Gastric Cancer—Does Borderline Performance Status and Heavy Burden of Disease in Real World Practice Impact Clinical Benefit?
title Ramucirumab in Indian Patients with Advanced Gastric Cancer—Does Borderline Performance Status and Heavy Burden of Disease in Real World Practice Impact Clinical Benefit?
title_full Ramucirumab in Indian Patients with Advanced Gastric Cancer—Does Borderline Performance Status and Heavy Burden of Disease in Real World Practice Impact Clinical Benefit?
title_fullStr Ramucirumab in Indian Patients with Advanced Gastric Cancer—Does Borderline Performance Status and Heavy Burden of Disease in Real World Practice Impact Clinical Benefit?
title_full_unstemmed Ramucirumab in Indian Patients with Advanced Gastric Cancer—Does Borderline Performance Status and Heavy Burden of Disease in Real World Practice Impact Clinical Benefit?
title_short Ramucirumab in Indian Patients with Advanced Gastric Cancer—Does Borderline Performance Status and Heavy Burden of Disease in Real World Practice Impact Clinical Benefit?
title_sort ramucirumab in indian patients with advanced gastric cancer—does borderline performance status and heavy burden of disease in real world practice impact clinical benefit?
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9273313/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35833042
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0041-1728980
work_keys_str_mv AT ramaswamyanant ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT bajajkripa ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT talwarvineet ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT prabhashkumar ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT batraullas ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT dhabharboman ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT sharmamansi ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT ghadyalpatilnikhil ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT ctsatish ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT goyalgautam ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT muzamiljavvid ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT bhattamit ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT jainparveen ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT ranadeanantbhushan ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT kamathmangesh ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT gawandejayantpundlik ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT thippeswamyravi ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT miranijimmy ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT reddyneelesh ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT gangulysandip ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT mishrasouravkumar ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT madabhaviirappa ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT hpshashidhara ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT pandasoumyasurath ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT patilshekar ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT bhargavaprabhat ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit
AT ostwalvikas ramucirumabinindianpatientswithadvancedgastriccancerdoesborderlineperformancestatusandheavyburdenofdiseaseinrealworldpracticeimpactclinicalbenefit