학술논문

A phase I pharmacokinetic study of intraperitoneal bortezomib and carboplatin in patients with persistent or recurrent ovarian cancer: An NRG Oncology/Gynecologic Oncology Group study
Document Type
article
Source
Gynecologic Oncology. 145(2)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Rare Diseases
Cancer
Orphan Drug
Digestive Diseases
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Clinical Research
Ovarian Cancer
Pain Research
6.1 Pharmaceuticals
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
Adult
Aged
Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols
Bortezomib
Carboplatin
Carcinoma
Ovarian Epithelial
Dose-Response Relationship
Drug
Female
Humans
Infusions
Parenteral
Middle Aged
Neoplasm Recurrence
Local
Neoplasms
Glandular and Epithelial
Ovarian Neoplasms
Young Adult
Intraperitoneal
Ovarian cancer
Proteasome inhibition
Platinum
Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine
Oncology & Carcinogenesis
Clinical sciences
Oncology and carcinogenesis
Reproductive medicine
Language
Abstract
PurposeIntraperitoneal (IP) therapy improves survival compared to intravenous (IV) treatment for women with newly diagnosed, optimally cytoreduced, ovarian cancer. However, the role of IP therapy in recurrent disease is unknown. Preclinical data demonstrated IP administration of the proteasome inhibitor, bortezomib prior to IP carboplatin increased tumor platinum accumulation resulting in synergistic cytotoxicity. We conducted this phase I trial of IP bortezomib and carboplatin in women with recurrent disease.MethodsWomen with recurrent ovarian cancer were treated with escalating doses of IP bortezomib - in combination with IP carboplatin (AUC 4 or 5) every 21days for 6cycles. Pharmacokinetics of both agents were evaluated in cycle 1.ResultsThirty-three women participated; 32 were evaluable for safety. Two patients experienced dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) at the first dose level (carboplatin AUC 5, bortezomib 0.5mg/m2), prompting carboplatin reduction to AUC 4 for subsequent dose levels. With carboplatin dose fixed at AUC 4, bortezomib was escalated from 0.5 to 2.5mg/m2 without DLT. Grade 3/4 related toxicities included abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea which were infrequent. The overall response rate in patients with measurable disease (n=21) was 19% (1 complete, 3 partial). Cmax and AUC in peritoneal fluid and plasma increased linearly with dose, with a favorable exposure ratio of the peritoneal cavity relative to peripheral blood plasma.ConclusionIP administration of this novel combination was feasible and showed promising activity in this phase I trial of heavily pre-treated women with ovarian cancer. Further evaluation of this IP combination should be conducted.