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Original Title
Lokal-ablative Radiotherapie des oligometastasierten Prostatakarzinoms mit Überlebensvorteil
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Copyright (c) 2019 Springer Medizin Verlag GmbH, ein Teil von Springer Nature; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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Journal Article
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Der Onkologe (Berlin); ISSN 0947-8965; ; v. 25(9); p. 827-828
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Fenner, Martin; Oing, Christoph; Dieing, Annette; Gauler, Thomas; Oechsle, Karin; Lorch, Anja; Hentrich, Marcus; Kopp, Hans-Georg; Bokemeyer, Carsten; Honecker, Friedemann, E-mail: friedemann.honecker@zetup.ch2019
AbstractAbstract
[en]
Background
Treatment options for patients (pts) with multiply relapsed or refractory metastatic germ cell cancer (GCC) are limited. The mTOR inhibitor everolimus has been approved for the treatment of different solid tumors and was assessed in refractory GCC within this phase II RADIT trial of the German Testicular Cancer Study Group.Methods
GCC pts progressing during cisplatin-based salvage chemotherapy, or relapsing after high-dose chemotherapy, or failing at least two lines of cisplatin-based chemotherapy were eligible. Prior combination chemotherapy with gemcitabine, oxaliplatin and paclitaxel, or a doublet combination of these drugs was mandatory. Primary endpoint was the progression-free survival rate at 12 weeks. Twenty-five evaluable pts were needed, assuming a 20% two-sided type 1 error and 95% power to reject the null hypothesis of 5% of patients being progression-free after 12 weeks. At least one pt among the first 13 pts being progression-free after 6 weeks was mandatory to complete recruitment. Secondary endpoints were objective response rate, disease control rate (SD + PR + CR), median progression-free survival (PFS), median overall survival (OS), and safety. The trial was registered at http://clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01242631.Results
Twenty-five pts from six German centers were treated with everolimus 10 mg orally once daily until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity between December 2010 and January 2014. 12-week PFS rate was 0%, no objective responses were achieved, and only one pt had stable disease after 6 weeks on treatment as a prerequisite of completing patient accrual accounting for a 6-week disease control rate of 5.4%. Median PFS and OS were estimated at 7.4 weeks and 8.3 weeks, respectively. Toxicity was acceptable, with one treatment discontinuation due to adverse events, and no new safety signals detected.Conclusions
Targeting the mTOR pathway with single-agent everolimus failed to produce clinically relevant responses in pts with heavily pretreated and/or cisplatin-refractory GCC.Primary Subject
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Copyright (c) 2019 Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology; ISSN 0171-5216; ; CODEN JCROD7; v. 145(3); p. 717-723
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AbstractAbstract
[en]
Purpose
: Outcomes of multiply relapsed, refractory germ-cell tumour (GCT) patients remain poor with an overall survival (OS) of a few months only. Thus, new therapeutic advances are urgently needed. Cabazitaxel has shown preclinical activity in platinum-resistant GCT models. Here, we report the first clinical case series of cabazitaxel treatment for platinum-refractory GCT.Methods
: Data of multiply relapsed GCT patients receiving single-agent cabazitaxel were retrospectively analysed. Endpoints included 12-week progression-free survival (PFS) rate, disease control rate, tumour marker responses, median PFS and OS, and toxicity.Results
: Cabazitaxel showed limited activity in 13 heavily pre-treated GCT patients. After a median follow-up of 23 weeks (IQR 29), 69% of patients were deceased. A median of 2 cycles of cabazitaxel (range 1–7) were applied. The 12-week PFS rate was 31%. Median PFS and OS were 7 and 23 weeks, respectively. Two patients achieved objective responses (15%), three patients (23%) achieved a tumour marker decline ≥ 50%, and the disease control rate was 39%. Cabazitaxel was well tolerated. CTCAE° III–IV haemato-toxicity was most common (54%), and dose reductions were scarce (15%).Conclusion
: In this case series, cabazitaxel showed limited activity in heavily pre-treated GCT patients. Two-phase II studies are underway (NCT02115165, NCT02478502) prospectively assessing cabazitaxel in multiply relapsed GCTs.Primary Subject
Source
Copyright (c) 2019 © Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2019; Indexer: nadia, v0.3.6; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology; ISSN 0171-5216; ; CODEN JCROD7; v. 146(2); p. 449-455
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