Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

NIMG-26. EVALUATING THE DAYS GAINED RESPONSE METRIC IN CLINICAL TRIALS USING BEVACIZUMAB PLUS ADDITIONAL AGENTS FOR RECURRENT GLIOBLASTOMA

View through CrossRef
Abstract Determining effective therapies for patients with recurrent glioblastoma remains difficult especially in small early phase clinical trials. Currently utilized estimators of treatment response rely on two-dimensional measurements of tumor progression (e.g. RANO, RECIST, MacDonald) that have often fallen short in reliably connecting patients who respond with positive survival outcomes. This has prompted consideration of advanced imaging and volumetric measurements by the RANO working group and others. Our proposed approach, Days Gained (DG), uses volumetric measurements to calculate a personalized response metric based on change in tumor growth characteristics pre/post-treatment. DG has shown promise for connecting imageable treatment response with clinically meaningful (statistically significant) survival benefit when applied in upfront and recurrent therapy settings, even in the context of coincident bevacizumab treatment. In this study, we seek to consider a new cohort of patients receiving bevacizumab in combination with other novel therapies to distinguish any subpopulation of patients with meaningful response. In this work, we identified a subset of 16 patients from bevacizumab clinical trials with data available for DG analysis requiring serial imaging (T1Gd and FLAIR) prior to and after the first cycle of therapy. Each trial evaluated bevacizumab alone versus bevacizumab plus either dasatinib or TRC105 in recurrent disease. Discrimination of time to progression (TTP) was evaluated at DG thresholds identified from our prior analysis of patients treated with bevacizumab. Using previously identified DG thresholds for clinically significant treatment benefit, in our cohort, DG measured by serial FLAIR imaging was significant in predicting longer TTP (120 DG, p=0.014), but T1Gd DG scores did not attain significance (p=0.630). Given the limited insights in connecting response metrics to accurately predicted outcomes, these data further support the use of DG as a burgeoning marker of treatment response (or lack of response) that may be useful for more routine integration into clinical trials.
Title: NIMG-26. EVALUATING THE DAYS GAINED RESPONSE METRIC IN CLINICAL TRIALS USING BEVACIZUMAB PLUS ADDITIONAL AGENTS FOR RECURRENT GLIOBLASTOMA
Description:
Abstract Determining effective therapies for patients with recurrent glioblastoma remains difficult especially in small early phase clinical trials.
Currently utilized estimators of treatment response rely on two-dimensional measurements of tumor progression (e.
g.
RANO, RECIST, MacDonald) that have often fallen short in reliably connecting patients who respond with positive survival outcomes.
This has prompted consideration of advanced imaging and volumetric measurements by the RANO working group and others.
Our proposed approach, Days Gained (DG), uses volumetric measurements to calculate a personalized response metric based on change in tumor growth characteristics pre/post-treatment.
DG has shown promise for connecting imageable treatment response with clinically meaningful (statistically significant) survival benefit when applied in upfront and recurrent therapy settings, even in the context of coincident bevacizumab treatment.
In this study, we seek to consider a new cohort of patients receiving bevacizumab in combination with other novel therapies to distinguish any subpopulation of patients with meaningful response.
In this work, we identified a subset of 16 patients from bevacizumab clinical trials with data available for DG analysis requiring serial imaging (T1Gd and FLAIR) prior to and after the first cycle of therapy.
Each trial evaluated bevacizumab alone versus bevacizumab plus either dasatinib or TRC105 in recurrent disease.
Discrimination of time to progression (TTP) was evaluated at DG thresholds identified from our prior analysis of patients treated with bevacizumab.
Using previously identified DG thresholds for clinically significant treatment benefit, in our cohort, DG measured by serial FLAIR imaging was significant in predicting longer TTP (120 DG, p=0.
014), but T1Gd DG scores did not attain significance (p=0.
630).
Given the limited insights in connecting response metrics to accurately predicted outcomes, these data further support the use of DG as a burgeoning marker of treatment response (or lack of response) that may be useful for more routine integration into clinical trials.

Related Results

Avastin for Recurrent Malignant Gliomas
Avastin for Recurrent Malignant Gliomas
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most aggressive cancer and has the worst prognosis of all malignant gliomas at diagnosis. At the time of disease recurrence/progression, GBM ha...
99mTc-Labeled Bevacizumab via HYNIC for Imaging of Melanoma
99mTc-Labeled Bevacizumab via HYNIC for Imaging of Melanoma
 Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is one of the classic factors to tumour-induced angiogenesis in several types, including melanoma. Bevacizumab, a monoclonal antibody ant...
Edoxaban and Cancer-Associated Venous Thromboembolism: A Meta-analysis of Clinical Trials
Edoxaban and Cancer-Associated Venous Thromboembolism: A Meta-analysis of Clinical Trials
Abstract Introduction Cancer patients face a venous thromboembolism (VTE) risk that is up to 50 times higher compared to individuals without cancer. In 2010, direct oral anticoagul...
Abstract 1842: Drug repurposing screen reveals glioblastoma cell line susceptibility to statins
Abstract 1842: Drug repurposing screen reveals glioblastoma cell line susceptibility to statins
Abstract Background: The standard therapy for glioblastoma patients is tumor resection followed by radiotherapy and temozolomide chemotherapy. Although glioblastoma ...
A comparative study of mappings in metric space and controlled metric space
A comparative study of mappings in metric space and controlled metric space
The objective of this paper is to present a comparative study of mapping in Metric Space and Controlled Metric Space. The study provides the structure, gap analysis and application...
Abstract LB127: VAL-083 in patients with recurrent glioblastoma treated under expanded access program
Abstract LB127: VAL-083 in patients with recurrent glioblastoma treated under expanded access program
Abstract Current standard-of-care for glioblastoma (GBM) includes surgery followed by concurrent therapy with radiation and temozolomide (TMZ) and adjuvant TMZ. Almo...
Prognostic factors and survival of recurrent glioblastoma: a systematic review
Prognostic factors and survival of recurrent glioblastoma: a systematic review
Introduction: Glioblastoma is a highly aggressive brain cancer with poor prognosis. Recurrence is common, and survival post-recurrence is limited. Identifying prognostic factors fo...

Back to Top