Pharma Strategy Blog

Commentary on Pharma & Biotech Oncology / Hematology New Product Development

Posts tagged ‘ESMO’

Labor Day heralds the end of summer, not just calendar-wise, but also metaphorically in terms of the tsunami of emails and meetings that appeared out of nowhere that many grudgingly return to.

The autumn conference season will soon be in full swing, with a number of key meetings coming up in the next month or two.

Photo Credit: Jimmy Harris

September will see us at several meetings, big and small, including the ECCO/ESMO/ESTRO conference now known as the European Multidisciplinary Cancer Conference (EMCC) from 23-27th.  No doubt industry people will take a while to switch from the well known ECCO and ESMO monikers that alternate each year.

There was some confusion over the hashtag, first it was #stockholm2011, which is not helpful in what the meeting was about and now #EMCC2011, which is better but still rather long.  Personally, I would have preferred #ECCO11 or #EMCC11 as the extra two characters make a huge difference when you only have 140 characters (or less if you include your handle and want Retweets), not to mention the speed of typing in a live session. #EMCC would have been even better, being both short and descriptive – Twitter only saves tweets that last 8 days or so, thus including the year is superfluous and a waste of precious characters.  Never mind, perhaps it will be #ESMO next year for simplicity and clarity 🙂

I plan on posting the usual tweet tracker before the event for those interested in following the conversations remotely.  We will be in Stockholm checking out what’s going on in oncology this year, so will tweet interesting snippets as they happen.

Currently, I’m reviewing the EMCC schedule and will post a pre-conference video highlights soon, discussing what I think will be hot topics from the meeting.  We also plan another highlights video from the meeting once data has been presented and will also post daily updates here on the blog where possible.

Having never been to Stockholm before, I’m really looking forward to it, but am under no illusions that we will actually see much of the place, beautiful though it may be!  It sounds an exotic locale compared to the grime of the NY metro area, but seriously, I rarely get to sightsee at these events, being far too busy running around from session to session to catch all the pipeline data and key presentations for our conference coverage.

If anyone else is going to ECCO, oops EMCC, and would like to meet up, please do let me know (you can email me by clicking on the beige Mail icon in the top right column) or say hello at the event.  It’s always nice to meet readers.

In the meantime, if you have any questions about the program, do feel fire away in the Comments section below and I will do my best to answer them either now or from the meeting.

Photo Credit: Jimmy Harris via Flickr

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Folks, here’s a quick update on kaizen (continuous improvement) for Pharma Strategy Blog.  Following several reader requests, I’ve been doing some improvements on the blog as follows:

  1. Google Translate widget added to enable easy reading in other languages – click the buttons in the right hand column to do this –>
  2. Sharing posts to LinkedIn – added a more user-friendly sharing tool at the top of each post to enable sharing and liking of posts with others to LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook and Google+.  If you enjoy reading any of the posts, please feel free to share them with others.
  3. Added a Google Search tool in the top right hand column for those interested in searching for information more easily in the archives.

In addition, the terms of use have been updated.  If you are providing services to pharma or biotech companies and want to share our information or insights, please do so with attribution. It isn’t cool to claim other people’s stuff as your own, and yes, they do notice!

The conference schedule has been updated. For those interested, PSB will be off to European CanCer Organisation (ECCO) meeting being held in Stockholm next month.  It looks like it will be an interesting event this year – ECCO and ESMO alternate in different years and I very much enjoyed the ESMO meeting in Milano last year.

For those wishing to meet up in person or need help with oncology-related consulting projects, please do feel free to contact me using the email icon at the top of the right hand column.

Once the ECCO abstracts are available, we will be doing a new vlog of what-to-watch-for (W2W4) in terms of likely highlights, so watch this space for updates!

By popular request, we are now rolling out the PSB conference newsletter.

This will be an occasional event that will be sent out after some scientific meetings we’ve attended.  They will contain snippets and summaries of data or new drug classes that we found interesting and worth highlighting and will be an adjunct to the blog, so you won’t get the same things twice 🙂

The first one will roll out by the end of this week and cover last week’s meeting from AACR on colorectal cancer biology.

You can sign up in the side bar on the top right —->

If you are a subscriber for this blog, you still need to opt-in to receive the newsletter. Sorry for the inconvenience, but personally, I hate it when people use my email address to send me things I didn’t request, so the same courtesy is extended to every one here too.

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Back from Milan and ESMO 2010, I thought it would be a good idea to quick a final quick overview of some of the early data from phase II trials that look interesting and might be worth watching as the research evolves (in no particular order).

1. Addition of cetuximab to cisplatin increased survival in triple negative breast cancer

Jose Baselga presented the results of a multi-centre randomised trial (from Spain, Belgium, Austria, Portugal, the UK and Israel) that compared the combination of cetuximab (Erbitux) with cisplatin versus cisplatin alone in 173 women with triple negative breast cancer (TNBC).

Although the overall response rate (ORR) trended in favour of the combination (20.0 vs 10.3%), the result did not meet the pre-specified assumptions. Interestingly though, the progression-free survival (PFS) showed a significant improvement with the addition of cetuximab (3.7 vs 1.5 months, P<0.03). Two months doesn't seem much, but in an advanced, highly aggressive disease, it may represent a disproportionally large improvement.

I'm not sure why cisplatin was chosen as a comparator, especially as TNBC is a particularly hard subset to treat, but the trial is ongoing to determine overall survival and a phase III study will likely evolve to determine if the results are repeatable in a larger population.

2. GSK2118436 in advanced melanoma with brain mets looks promising in a phase I/II study

By promising, I mean this was a very small cohort of patients who saw some early and unexpected evidence of tumour shrinkage in brain mets that had evolved from primary melanoma. The scans shown by the presenter, Georgina Long, from the Melanoma Institute Australia and Westmead Hospital in Sydney actually gave me goosebumps and it wasn't the chill in the room. You just don't expect to see such noticeable shrinkage with a single agent in this setting because this is a horrid, aggressive disease that has a nasty tendency to metastasize easily.

What was interesting about this study is that GSK2118436 is a BRAF inhibitor that also specifically targets V600E, similarly to Plexxikon/Roche's PLX4032. In both cases, they bind to the protein and shut down signaling activity. Although the trial is very early, since it looked at 3 different cohorts, the small subset with brain mets (n=10) were what caught everyone in the audience's attention, although good responses were also seen in the advanced melanoma group without brain mets.

To put the results in context, all 10 patients experienced some control of their brain mets, with 9 of the 10 patients having reductions in the overall size of their tumours. The overall reductions ranged from 20-100% of brain metastases that were 3mm or larger in diameter before treatment.

That just doesn't happen with advanced melanoma with brain mets… at least, I've never seen such dramatic responses before.

The big questions for me are how long will the responses be durable before resistance sets in and how soon is a larger scale trial going to get up and running? This is a very promising and most unexpected development that is worth following.

Dr Long summed it up very nicely:

“The ability to inhibit oncogenic BRAF is the most important development in the history of drug treatment of melanoma.”

3. ARQ-197 continues to show positive results in NSCLC

In this presentation, the final results of the phase II trial in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) were discussed. We've covered this promising agent, ARQ-197 (ArQule/Daiichi Sankyo), a small molecule c-MET inhibitor, before on this blog.

A final analysis looked at the complete results in more depth. Patients treated with ARQ 197 plus erlotinib (Tarceva) developed new metastases in a median time of 7.3 months compared with 3.6 months for patients treated with erlotinib plus placebo.

What I found interesting in this study was that this effect was more pronounced among patients with non-squamous (NS) histology, since the median time to develop new metastases was 11.0 months in the ARQ 197 plus erlotinib arm compared to 3.6 months for those treated with the control arm (erlotinib plus placebo). I'm not sure why the NS over squamous histology should matter, but they clearly benefitted more.

The sponsors, ArQule and Daiichi Sankyo, have announced that they plan to pursue a phase III trial in this setting. It would, however, be nice to see an analysis of any lung biopsies collected to see if there are any relevant biomarkers that would explain the differences in histology and responders, otherwise many physicians may see this as an incremental improvement, if confirmed in a larger trial. Were thre any differences in people who were EGFR mutation or MET positive, for example?

There was certainly some energetic discussion in the Q&A, with tough questions asked of the speaker regarding why go ahead with a phase III study given a small benefit and why use OS when PFS is small and complicated by crossover, all very fair questions. Like many, I'd really like to see more granular analysis of who is responding to this agent and why before rushing into a phase III trial that may see a disappearing of any positive signal when investigator bias is eliminated in a larger randomised trial.

4. METMAB showed promising results in a subset of lung cancer patients

In the same session, David Spiegel presented the data from a phase II study with a different c-MET inhibitor. Here, patients with advanced NSCLC (n=128) were randomly assigned to receive either erlotinib plus METMAb (Roche/Genentech), a monoclonal antibody that binds specifically to the MET receptor on cancer cells or a control arm (erlotinib plus placebo).

The reason for the interest in c-MET inhibitors is that MET activation has been implicated in the resistance of lung cancers to EGFR inhibitors such as erlotinib. The big question is therefore whether a combination of the two would overcome resistance or not, thereby prolonging life.

In this study, participants were tested for mutations in the EGFR gene and also for expression of MET in tumour samples. 

The results were interesting – 51% of patients whose tumours expressed MET and those who received METMAb plus erlotinib had better OS and longer PFS than those who received erlotinib plus placebo.

Furthermore, in the subset of MET+ patients, adding METMAb to erlotinib nearly halved the risk of disease progression or death during the study compared to those treated with erlotinib plus placebo. In addition, patients whose tumours did not express MET protein appeared to do worse when treated with the METMAb/erlotinib combination, suggesting that the biomarker may be able to determine who is more likely to respond to therapy.

This is good news if it is repeatable in a phase III trial and show durable efficacy with good tolerability, because then potentially, oncologists would be able to screen and preselect patients for treatment with METMab rather than expose all patients to the systemic side effects without hope of it working.

Last but not least, there was some updated information on the novel trastuzumab-DM1 (T-DM1) combination therapy (Roche/Genentech).

4. T-DM1 continues to show solid results in metastatic breast cancer

Edith Perez presented the results of a phase II study looking at first line treatment with a new combination agent, trastuzumab-DM1 or T-DM1, in metastatic breast cancer.

As far as I know, T-DM1 is the first of a new type of cancer therapy known as an antibody-drug conjugate. Basically, it binds together two existing cancer drugs with the aim of delivering both drugs specifically to cancer cells, ie trastuzumab (Herceptin), an approved monoclonal antibody that targets the protein HER2 and DM1, a chemotherapy agent that targets microtubules. The goal of the new combination is too see if cardiotoxicity, a common problem associated with standard anthracycline therapy, is reduced and if efficacy is subsequently improved.

Women with breast cancer were randomised to treatment with either trastuzumab plus the chemotherapy drug docetaxel, or T-DM1. All 137 participants had HER2-positive metastatic cancer, with no prior chemotherapy for their metastatic disease.

The good news is that the early results demonstrated that T-DM1 has good anti-tumour activity as well as much lower toxicity when evaluated side by side to standard therapy.

After a median of approx 6 months of follow up, the overall response rate of in women who received T-DM1 was 48% compared with 41% in the control arm (trastuzumab plus docetaxel). The rates of clinically relevant adverse events were also significantly lower in the T-DM1 arm (37%) compared to the rate in women given traztuzumab plus docetaxel (75%).

Overall, I think the slight improvement in ORR was more than compensated by the dramatic improvement in side effects, which ultimately affect a patient's quality of life when undergoing cancer treatment. According to my chicken scratch notes from the session, cardiotoxicity and myelosuppression were both much improved in the T-DM1 arm over standard therapy.

Perez noted that the final analysis of the PFS data is expected in 2Q 2011, which I'm sure will be eagerly awaited based on the encouraging early data, although feeling better is one thing, but ultimately the sine qua non is will the women live longer?

All in all, I'm glad I trekked all the way to Milan for ESMO. There was more positive and promising early data than expected and aside from the repetitive blister walks, it was an enjoyable event. It was also nice to catch up with some friends in person and meet several readers of this blog who kindly came up and introduced themselves – I hope you all enjoyed the conference as much as I did!

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Oh my, I can't believe I slept for 9 hours solid last night and woke up with no jetlag and access to the New Twitter interface, finally! It must have been the long walk I took around the Duomo and Brera districts or perhaps the Negroni apperitivo, but hard to believe that is a logical anti-jetlag solution!

Duomo Today is Super Friday at ESMO, in other words, the corporate symposia. There are a lot of interesting presentations that I'm looking forward to, but they are rightly embargoed and I can't talk about them yet. Thus we have a whole day of corporately sponsored 'educational sessions'. I may not tweet these events, except perhaps two; one from Roche at 3pm on angiogenesis and another from J&J at 4.30pm discussing advanced ovarian and prostate cancer.  

Sadly, I'm not as big a fan of Super Fridays as I used to be. Why? Because they used to be educational events, now many seem more biased and shilling a company's drug without fair balance or context. Am hoping that's not the case here, but in the last couple of years, the focus has definitely drifted too far at some meetings. 

For me, I'm much more of a purist and a fan of sessions that address pros and cons, controversial issues and with fair balance, then let the audience vote and decide before and after the presentations as that often keeps the presenters on their toes.

Ah well, times change, like Mrs Thatcher famously said, this lady's not for changing on the issue for now ;)

 

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