Cargando…

An open label, randomized phase 2 trial assessing the impact of food on the tolerability of abemaciclib in patients with advanced breast cancer

PURPOSE: Abemaciclib, a CDK4 & 6 inhibitor, is indicated for advanced breast cancer treatment. Diarrhea is a frequently associated adverse event of abemaciclib. The study objective was to investigate if food intake impacts local gastrointestinal toxicity. METHODS: This Phase 2 study (I3Y-MC-JPCP...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lim, Elgene, Boyle, Frances, Okera, Meena, Loi, Sherene, Goksu, Sema Sezgin, van Hal, Gertjan, Chapman, Sonya C., Gable, Jonathon Colby, Chen, Yanyun, Price, Gregory L., Hossain, Anwar M., Gainford, M. Corona, Ezquerra, Meritxell Bellet
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9464758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35915198
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10549-022-06690-5
_version_ 1784787641478152192
author Lim, Elgene
Boyle, Frances
Okera, Meena
Loi, Sherene
Goksu, Sema Sezgin
van Hal, Gertjan
Chapman, Sonya C.
Gable, Jonathon Colby
Chen, Yanyun
Price, Gregory L.
Hossain, Anwar M.
Gainford, M. Corona
Ezquerra, Meritxell Bellet
author_facet Lim, Elgene
Boyle, Frances
Okera, Meena
Loi, Sherene
Goksu, Sema Sezgin
van Hal, Gertjan
Chapman, Sonya C.
Gable, Jonathon Colby
Chen, Yanyun
Price, Gregory L.
Hossain, Anwar M.
Gainford, M. Corona
Ezquerra, Meritxell Bellet
author_sort Lim, Elgene
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Abemaciclib, a CDK4 & 6 inhibitor, is indicated for advanced breast cancer treatment. Diarrhea is a frequently associated adverse event of abemaciclib. The study objective was to investigate if food intake impacts local gastrointestinal toxicity. METHODS: This Phase 2 study (I3Y-MC-JPCP, NCT03703466) randomized 72 patients 1:1:1 to receive abemaciclib 200 mg monotherapy twice daily (1) with a meal, (2) in a modified fasting state or (3) without regard to food. Primary endpoints included: incidence of investigator assessed severe (≥ Grade 3), prolonged (> 7 days) Grade 2 diarrhea, treatment discontinuation, dose modifications, and loperamide utilization during the first 3 cycles of treatment. Patient outcomes were captured via a daily electronic diary. Pharmacokinetics (PK) are reported. RESULTS: Incidence of investigator assessed severe diarrhea (Grade ≥ 3) was 1.4% (1 patient in Arm 1). Median duration of Grade 3 diarrhea was 1 day by both investigator assessment (1 patient in Arm 1) and patient-reported assessment (1 patient each in Arms 1 and 3). Median duration of investigator-assessed Grade 2 diarrhea was 2 days overall. No patient discontinued treatment due to diarrhea. Nine patients (12.7%) had a dose reduction, and 7 patients (9.9%) had a dose omission due to diarrhea. Ninety-four percent of patients used loperamide at least once. Abemaciclib PK was comparable across the 3 arms. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that diarrhea incidence associated with abemaciclib was unrelated to timing of food intake, was predominantly low grade, of short duration and well managed with loperamide and dose modifications. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10549-022-06690-5.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9464758
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Springer US
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94647582022-09-13 An open label, randomized phase 2 trial assessing the impact of food on the tolerability of abemaciclib in patients with advanced breast cancer Lim, Elgene Boyle, Frances Okera, Meena Loi, Sherene Goksu, Sema Sezgin van Hal, Gertjan Chapman, Sonya C. Gable, Jonathon Colby Chen, Yanyun Price, Gregory L. Hossain, Anwar M. Gainford, M. Corona Ezquerra, Meritxell Bellet Breast Cancer Res Treat Clinical Trial PURPOSE: Abemaciclib, a CDK4 & 6 inhibitor, is indicated for advanced breast cancer treatment. Diarrhea is a frequently associated adverse event of abemaciclib. The study objective was to investigate if food intake impacts local gastrointestinal toxicity. METHODS: This Phase 2 study (I3Y-MC-JPCP, NCT03703466) randomized 72 patients 1:1:1 to receive abemaciclib 200 mg monotherapy twice daily (1) with a meal, (2) in a modified fasting state or (3) without regard to food. Primary endpoints included: incidence of investigator assessed severe (≥ Grade 3), prolonged (> 7 days) Grade 2 diarrhea, treatment discontinuation, dose modifications, and loperamide utilization during the first 3 cycles of treatment. Patient outcomes were captured via a daily electronic diary. Pharmacokinetics (PK) are reported. RESULTS: Incidence of investigator assessed severe diarrhea (Grade ≥ 3) was 1.4% (1 patient in Arm 1). Median duration of Grade 3 diarrhea was 1 day by both investigator assessment (1 patient in Arm 1) and patient-reported assessment (1 patient each in Arms 1 and 3). Median duration of investigator-assessed Grade 2 diarrhea was 2 days overall. No patient discontinued treatment due to diarrhea. Nine patients (12.7%) had a dose reduction, and 7 patients (9.9%) had a dose omission due to diarrhea. Ninety-four percent of patients used loperamide at least once. Abemaciclib PK was comparable across the 3 arms. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that diarrhea incidence associated with abemaciclib was unrelated to timing of food intake, was predominantly low grade, of short duration and well managed with loperamide and dose modifications. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10549-022-06690-5. Springer US 2022-08-01 2022 /pmc/articles/PMC9464758/ /pubmed/35915198 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10549-022-06690-5 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Open AccessThis article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Clinical Trial
Lim, Elgene
Boyle, Frances
Okera, Meena
Loi, Sherene
Goksu, Sema Sezgin
van Hal, Gertjan
Chapman, Sonya C.
Gable, Jonathon Colby
Chen, Yanyun
Price, Gregory L.
Hossain, Anwar M.
Gainford, M. Corona
Ezquerra, Meritxell Bellet
An open label, randomized phase 2 trial assessing the impact of food on the tolerability of abemaciclib in patients with advanced breast cancer
title An open label, randomized phase 2 trial assessing the impact of food on the tolerability of abemaciclib in patients with advanced breast cancer
title_full An open label, randomized phase 2 trial assessing the impact of food on the tolerability of abemaciclib in patients with advanced breast cancer
title_fullStr An open label, randomized phase 2 trial assessing the impact of food on the tolerability of abemaciclib in patients with advanced breast cancer
title_full_unstemmed An open label, randomized phase 2 trial assessing the impact of food on the tolerability of abemaciclib in patients with advanced breast cancer
title_short An open label, randomized phase 2 trial assessing the impact of food on the tolerability of abemaciclib in patients with advanced breast cancer
title_sort open label, randomized phase 2 trial assessing the impact of food on the tolerability of abemaciclib in patients with advanced breast cancer
topic Clinical Trial
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9464758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35915198
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10549-022-06690-5
work_keys_str_mv AT limelgene anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT boylefrances anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT okerameena anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT loisherene anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT goksusemasezgin anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT vanhalgertjan anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT chapmansonyac anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT gablejonathoncolby anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT chenyanyun anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT pricegregoryl anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT hossainanwarm anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT gainfordmcorona anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT ezquerrameritxellbellet anopenlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT limelgene openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT boylefrances openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT okerameena openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT loisherene openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT goksusemasezgin openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT vanhalgertjan openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT chapmansonyac openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT gablejonathoncolby openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT chenyanyun openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT pricegregoryl openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT hossainanwarm openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT gainfordmcorona openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer
AT ezquerrameritxellbellet openlabelrandomizedphase2trialassessingtheimpactoffoodonthetolerabilityofabemaciclibinpatientswithadvancedbreastcancer