TY - JOUR
T1 - Refining neoadjuvant therapy clinical trial design for muscle-invasive bladder cancer before cystectomy
T2 - a joint US Food and Drug Administration and Bladder Cancer Advocacy Network workshop
AU - Chang, Elaine
AU - Apolo, Andrea B.
AU - Bangs, Rick
AU - Chisolm, Stephanie
AU - Duddalwar, Vinay
AU - Efstathiou, Jason A.
AU - Goldberg, Kirsten B.
AU - Hansel, Donna E.
AU - Kamat, Ashish M.
AU - Kluetz, Paul G.
AU - Lerner, Seth P.
AU - Plimack, Elizabeth
AU - Prowell, Tatiana
AU - Singh, Harpreet
AU - Suzman, Daniel
AU - Yu, Evan Y.
AU - Zhang, Hui
AU - Beaver, Julia A.
AU - Pazdur, Richard
AU - Weinstock, Chana
AU - Galsky, Matthew D.
N1 - Funding Information:
E.C., A.B.A., K.B.G., P.G.K., T.P., H.S., D.S., H.Z., J.A.B., R.P. and C.W. are employees of the US government. R.B. receives honoraria from SWOG, the National Cancer Institute, the NCRA Working Group on Clinical Trials Enrollment and Retention, the Patient Advocate Steering Committee, the Cancer Care Delivery Research Steering Committee; he serves on committees with the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, the Bladder Cancer Advocacy Network, Stand Up to Cancer, Bladder Cancer (Editorial Board). V.D. receives funding from Samsung Healthcare; he serves on the advisory board for Deeptek and is a consultant for Radmetrix. J.A.E. has served as a consultant for Blue Earth Diagnostics, Boston Scientific, AstraZeneca, Taris Biomedical; and on advisory boards for Merck, Roivant Pharma, Myovant Sciences, Janssen, Bayer Healthcare, Progenics, Genentech and EMD Serono. A.M.K. receives funding from Adolor, Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS), FKD Industries, FerGene, Heat Biologics, Merck, Photocure, SWOG, NIH/GU SPORE, AIBCCR, holds a patent for Cytokine Predictors of Response to Intravesical Therapy; he serves/served as a consultant or on the advisory board for Abbott Molecular, Arquer Diagnostics, ArTara, Asieris, AstraZeneca, BioClin Therapeutics, Biological Dynamics, BMS, Cepheid, CG Oncology, Cold Genesys, H3 Biomedicine/Eisai, Engene, FerGene, Ferring, Imagin Medical, Janssen, MdDxHealth, Medac, Merck, Pfizer, Photocure, ProTara, Roviant, Seattle Genetics, Sessen Bio, Theralase, TMC Innovation, US Biotest, and is a board member of the International Bladder Cancer Group. S.P.L. receives honoraria from UroToday, holds a patent for a TCGA classifier, is involved in clinical trials sponsored by Endo, FKD, JBL, Genentech, SWOG, URoGen, Vaxiion and Viventia; he serves as a consultant or on the advisory board for Ferring, Genentech, Merck, Pfizer, QED, UroGen, Vaxiion, Verity. E.P. receives institutional funding from Astellas, AstraZeneca, BMS, Genentech, Merck, Peloton, Pfizer; she serves as a consultant for BMS, Genentech, Incyte, Janssen, Merck, AstraZeneca, Pfizer. E.Y.Y. receives institutional funding from Bayer, Blue Earth, Daiichi-Sankyo, Dendreon, Merck, Pharmacyclics, Seattle Genetics, Taiho; he serves as a consultant or on the advisory board for Bayer, Clovis, Merck. M.D.G. holds stock/ownership in Rappta Therapeutics, receives institutional funding from Janssen Oncology, Dendreon, Novartis, BMS, Merck, AstraZeneca, Genentech/Roche; he serves as a consultant for BioMotiv, Janssen, Dendreon, Merck, GlaxoSmithKline, Lilly, Astellas Pharma, Genentech, EMD Serono, AstraZeneca, Seattle Genetics, Incyte, Aileron Therapeutics, Dracen, Inovio Pharmaceuticals, NuMab, Dragonfly Therapeutics. His institution holds a patent in Methods and Compositions for Treating Cancer and Related Methods.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, This is a U.S. government work and not under copyright protection in the U.S.; foreign copyright protection may apply.
PY - 2022/1
Y1 - 2022/1
N2 - The success of the use of novel therapies in the treatment of advanced urothelial carcinoma has contributed to growing interest in evaluating these therapies at earlier stages of the disease. However, trials evaluating these therapies in the neoadjuvant setting must have clearly defined study elements and appropriately selected end points to ensure the applicability of the trial and enable interpretation of the study results. To advance the development of rational trial design, a public workshop jointly sponsored by the US Food and Drug Administration and the Bladder Cancer Advocacy Network convened in August 2019. Clinicians, clinical trialists, radiologists, biostatisticians, patients, advocates and other stakeholders discussed key elements and end points when designing trials of neoadjuvant therapy for muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC), identifying opportunities to refine eligibility, design and end points for neoadjuvant trials in MIBC. Although pathological complete response (pCR) is already being used as a co-primary end point, both individual-level and trial-level surrogacy for time-to-event end points, such as event-free survival or overall survival, remain incompletely characterized in MIBC. Additionally, use of pCR is limited by heterogeneity in pathological evaluation and the fact that the magnitude of pCR improvement that might translate into a meaningful clinical benefit remains unclear. Given existing knowledge gaps, capture of highly granular patient-related, tumour-related and treatment-related characteristics in the current generation of neoadjuvant MIBC trials will be critical to informing the design of future trials.
AB - The success of the use of novel therapies in the treatment of advanced urothelial carcinoma has contributed to growing interest in evaluating these therapies at earlier stages of the disease. However, trials evaluating these therapies in the neoadjuvant setting must have clearly defined study elements and appropriately selected end points to ensure the applicability of the trial and enable interpretation of the study results. To advance the development of rational trial design, a public workshop jointly sponsored by the US Food and Drug Administration and the Bladder Cancer Advocacy Network convened in August 2019. Clinicians, clinical trialists, radiologists, biostatisticians, patients, advocates and other stakeholders discussed key elements and end points when designing trials of neoadjuvant therapy for muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC), identifying opportunities to refine eligibility, design and end points for neoadjuvant trials in MIBC. Although pathological complete response (pCR) is already being used as a co-primary end point, both individual-level and trial-level surrogacy for time-to-event end points, such as event-free survival or overall survival, remain incompletely characterized in MIBC. Additionally, use of pCR is limited by heterogeneity in pathological evaluation and the fact that the magnitude of pCR improvement that might translate into a meaningful clinical benefit remains unclear. Given existing knowledge gaps, capture of highly granular patient-related, tumour-related and treatment-related characteristics in the current generation of neoadjuvant MIBC trials will be critical to informing the design of future trials.
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U2 - 10.1038/s41585-021-00505-w
DO - 10.1038/s41585-021-00505-w
M3 - Review article
C2 - 34508246
AN - SCOPUS:85115199946
SN - 1759-4812
VL - 19
SP - 37
EP - 46
JO - Nature Reviews Urology
JF - Nature Reviews Urology
IS - 1
ER -