Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01797120

Study of Fulvestrant +/- Everolimus in Post-Menopausal, Hormone-Receptor + Metastatic Breast Ca Resistant to AI

Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Phase II Trial of Fulvestrant (Faslodex) Plus Everolimus in Post-Menopausal Patients With Hormone-Receptor Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer Resistant to Aromatase Inhibitor Therapy

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
131 (actual)
Sponsor
PrECOG, LLC. · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Post-menopausal women with hormone-receptor positive (HR+) metastatic breast cancer resistant to aromatase inhibitor (AI) therapy will be randomized to receive Fulvestrant (Faslodex) with Everolimus or Fulvestrant (Faslodex) with a placebo (no active ingredients). Fulvestrant has demonstrated activity when used as first, second, or third line endocrine therapy, making it an attractive therapy for combination with other agents. In addition, it is commonly reserved for use following disease progression on AI therapy. Everolimus is an orally administered drug that blocks a signaling pathway called "mTOR". "mTOR" acts as a regulator for many processes in the body, including cell growth. Blocking this pathway may have an effect on cell growth. The combination of a novel class of agents (mTOR inhibitors) and an established standard treatment for metastatic HR+ breast cancer may potentially increase the clinical benefit by targeting multiple different biological pathways.

Detailed description

Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed malignancy in women worldwide. In the United States, an estimated 230,480 new cases of invasive breast cancer were diagnosed in 2011, with 39,520 breast cancer deaths. In 40-80% of women with node-positive disease at diagnosis, their breast cancer will recur. When distant metastases occur, median survival is 18 to 36 months from time of recurrence. Among the 60-70% of women with HR+ breast cancer, 40-60% of them will benefit from endocrine therapy. Endocrine therapy has shown to yield similar survival rates in hormone-sensitive disease as compared to chemotherapy; although response rates are lower and responses develop more slowly. Endocrine therapy is considerably less toxic than chemotherapy, and is therefore the preferred treatment option for patients with HR+ disease. Endocrine therapy represents the foundation of treatment for HR+ metastatic and locally advanced breast cancer. Multiple compounds in varying classes exist, and those most widely used include the selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs), aromatase inhibitors (AIs), and the selective estrogen receptor down-regulators (SERDs). Although the utility of these drugs is well established, as many as 50% of women with HR+ breast cancer will fail to respond to endocrine treatment. Moreover, those who do respond will inevitably develop acquired resistance. Fulvestrant is the first drug which acts as a pure estrogen receptor (ER) antagonist without known agonist effects. It competitively binds to the ERs with an approximately 100 times greater affinity than that of tamoxifen. Fulvestrant promotes the degradation of ERs and subsequently prevents ER-mediated gene transcription. Everolimus (RAD001) is an oral derivative of rapamycin that is an m-TOR inhibitor. At cellular and molecular levels, everolimus acts as a signal transduction inhibitor. Everolimus selectively inhibits mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin); a key and highly conserved serine-threonine kinase which is present in all cells and is a central regulator of protein synthesis and ultimately cell growth, cell proliferation, angiogenesis and cell survival. mTOR is the only currently known target of everolimus. In oncology, everolimus has been in clinical development since 2002 for patients with various hematologic and non-hematologic malignancies as a single agent or in combination with antitumor agents, including cytotoxic chemotherapeutic agents, targeted therapies, antibodies and hormonal agents. Patients will be randomized (1:1) to receive everolimus or placebo with fulvestrant after consideration of stratification factors of performance status (0 vs. 1), measurable disease (yes vs. no), and prior chemotherapy for metastatic disease (yes vs. no). Patients will be evaluated for disease response every 12 weeks, and treated until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity or withdrawal of consent for a maximum of 12 cycles (48 weeks). Patients with no evidence of progressive disease who remain on study after completing 12 cycles are unblinded and continue to receive fulvestrant alone (if originally randomized to placebo) or in combination with everolimus (if originally randomized to everolimus) at the same dose and schedule. Patients will continue to be evaluated for disease response every 12 weeks and continue until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGFulvestrantFulvestrant 500 mg Day 1 \& 15 of Cycle 1, then 500 mg Day 1 of all subsequent cycles (every 28 days for 12 cycles). If no evidence of disease progression after 12 cycles, unblind and continue same dose and schedule until progression or unacceptable toxicity.
DRUGEverolimusEverolimus 10 mg (2 tablets) daily x 12 cycles. If no evidence of disease progression after 12 cycles, unblind and continue same dose and schedule until progression or unacceptable toxicity.
DRUGPlaceboPlacebo for Everolimus (2 tablets) daily x 12 cycles. Placebo manufactured to mimic everolimus tablet.

Timeline

Start date
2013-05-31
Primary completion
2017-03-22
Completion
2017-09-12
First posted
2013-02-22
Last updated
2018-05-30
Results posted
2018-04-30

Locations

25 sites across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01797120. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.