Phase II trial of bortezomib plus doxorubicin in hepatocellular carcinoma (E6202): a trial of the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group

Kristen K Ciombor, Yang Feng, Al Bowen Benson 3rd, Yingjun Su, Linda Horton, Sarah P Short, John Sae Wook Kauh, Charles Staley, Mary Mulcahy, Mark Powell, Katayoun I Amiri, Ann Richmond, Jordan Berlin, Kristen K Ciombor, Yang Feng, Al Bowen Benson 3rd, Yingjun Su, Linda Horton, Sarah P Short, John Sae Wook Kauh, Charles Staley, Mary Mulcahy, Mark Powell, Katayoun I Amiri, Ann Richmond, Jordan Berlin

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of bortezomib in combination with doxorubicin in patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma, and to correlate pharmacodynamic markers of proteasome inhibition with response and survival.

Experimental design: This phase II, open-label, multicenter study examined the efficacy of bortezomib (1.3 mg/m(2) IV on d1, 4, 8, 11) and doxorubicin (15 mg/m(2) IV on d1, 8) in 21-day cycles. The primary endpoint was objective response rate.

Results: Best responses in 38 treated patients were 1 partial response (2.6 %), 10 (26.3 %) stable disease, and 17 (44.7 %) progressive disease; 10 patients were unevaluable. Median PFS was 2.2 months. Median OS was 6.1 months. The most common grade 3 to 4 toxicities were hypertension, glucose intolerance, ascites, ALT elevation, hyperglycemia and thrombosis/embolism. Worse PFS was seen in patients with elevated IL-6, IL-8, MIP-1α and EMSA for NF-κB at the start of treatment. Worse OS was seen in patients with elevated IL-8 and VEGF at the start of treatment. Patients had improved OS if a change in the natural log of serum MIP-1α/CCL3 was seen after treatment. RANTES/CCL5 levels decreased significantly with treatment.

Conclusions: The combination of doxorubicin and bortezomib was well-tolerated in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, but the primary endpoint was not met. Exploratory analyses of markers of proteasome inhibition suggest a possible prognostic and predictive role and should be explored further in tumor types for which bortezomib is efficacious.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00083226.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Kaplan-Meier curves of progression-free and overall survival for all evaluable patients treated with doxorubicin and bortezomib

Source: PubMed

3
Subskrybuj