Abagovomab as maintenance therapy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer: a phase III trial of the AGO OVAR, COGI, GINECO, and GEICO--the MIMOSA study

  • Paul Sabbatini
  • Philipp Harter
  • Giovanni Scambia
  • Jalid Sehouli
  • Werner Meier
  • Pauline Wimberger
  • Klaus H Baumann
  • Christian Kurzeder
  • Barbara Schmalfeldt
  • David Cibula
  • Mariusz Bidzinski
  • Antonio Casado
  • Andrea Martoni
  • Nicoletta Colombo
  • Robert W Holloway
  • Luigi Selvaggi
  • Andrew Li
  • Jose del Campo
  • Karel Cwiertka
  • Tamas Pinter
  • Jan B Vermorken
  • Eric Pujade-Lauraine
  • Simona Scartoni
  • Monica Bertolotti
  • Cecilia Simonelli
  • Angela Capriati
  • Carlo Alberto Maggi
  • Jonathan S Berek
  • Jacobus Pfisterer

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine whether abagovomab maintenance therapy prolongs recurrence-free (RFS) and overall survival (OS) in patients with ovarian cancer in first clinical remission.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients with International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage III to IV ovarian cancer in complete clinical remission after primary surgery and platinum- and taxane-based chemotherapy were randomly assigned at a ratio of 2:1 in a phase III, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter study. Abagovomab 2 mg or placebo was administered as 1-mL suspension once every 2 weeks for 6 weeks (induction phase) and then once every 4 weeks (maintenance phase) until recurrence or up to 21 months after random assignment of the last patient. The primary end point was RFS; secondary end points were OS and immunologic response.

RESULTS: Characteristics of the 888 patients included: mean age, 56.3 years; Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status, ≤ 1 in > 99% of patients; serous papillary subtype, 81.5%; stage III, 85.9%; and cancer antigen 125 ≤ 35 U/mL after third cycle, 80.9%. Mean exposure to study treatment (± standard deviation) was 449.7 ± 333.08 days. Hazard ratio (HR) of RFS for the treatment group using tumor size categorization (≤ 1 cm, > 1 cm) was 1.099 (95% CI, 0.919 to 1.315; P = .301). HR of OS using tumor size categorization (≤ 1 cm, > 1 cm) was 1.150 (95% CI, 0.872 to 1.518; P = .322). The most frequently reported type of adverse event was an injection site reaction in 445 patients (50.2%), followed by injection site erythema and fatigue in 227 (25.6%) and 212 patients (23.9%), respectively. By the final visit, median anti-anti-idiotypic antibody level was 493,000.0 ng/mL, indicating a robust response.

CONCLUSION: Abagovomab administered as repeated monthly injections is safe and induces a measurable immune response. Administration as maintenance therapy for patients with ovarian cancer in first remission does not prolong RFS or OS.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0732-183X
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 20.04.2013
PubMed 23478059