Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3944095 | Gynecologic Oncology | 2010 | 6 Pages |
ObjectiveDisseminated gynecologic cancers are usually fatal due to chemoresistance. Recently, rationally developed, targeted agents are entering the early clinical trials setting. We assessed patients with metastatic gynecologic cancers in a dedicated phase I clinical trials clinic in order to determine their outcome.MethodsWe reviewed records for 89 consecutive patients with gynecologic cancers referred to the Phase I Clinical Trials Program, 85 (96%) of whom were treated on ≥ 1 trial.ResultsCancer diagnoses were ovarian (N = 43), uterine (N = 19), cervix (N = 17), and other. Median age was 58 years; median number of prior cytotoxic regimens, five. Two patients (2.4%) achieved a CR; four (4.7%), a PR; and eight (9.4%), SD≥6 months (total CR/PR/SD ≥ 6 months = 16.5%) for the first phase I trial. Twenty-five patients enrolled on a second trial and three, on a third (N = 113 trials total). Combining response data for all trials, of the 85 patients, two achieved CR (2.4%), nine achieved PR (10.6%), and 12 (14%) had SD for ≥6 months. One-year survival was 30% (95% CI, 21% to 44%). There was no difference in time-to-treatment failure (TTF) on phase I versus the patient's last standard treatment.ConclusionTwenty-three of 85 patients (27%) with advanced, heavily pretreated, gynecologic cancers achieved CR/PR/SD≥6 months on a phase I trial, and overall TTF on phase I was comparable to that of last conventional therapy, suggesting that participation in a phase I trial is a reasonable option for these patients.