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A phase II trial of a multi-agent oral antiangiogenic (metronomic) regimen in children with recurrent or progressive cancer

Authors :
Christine Chordas
Michael S. Isakoff
Laura Kondrat
Ziad Khatib
Anne Bendel
Shannon M. Hubbs
Peter E. Manley
Joshua B. Rubin
Federico Campigotto
Wilbur J. Pan
Mark W. Kieran
Stewart Goldman
Donna Neuberg
Christopher D. Turner
Jeffrey C. Allen
Annette M. Werger
Mary Ann Zimmerman
Melanie Comito
Jay B. Pietrantonio
Susan N. Chi
Nathan Robison
Source :
Pediatric Blood & Cancer
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
BlackWell Publishing Ltd, 2013.

Abstract

Background Preclinical models show that an antiangiogenic regimen at low-dose daily (metronomic) dosing may be effective against chemotherapy-resistant tumors. We undertook a prospective, open-label, single-arm, multi-institutional phase II study to evaluate the efficacy of a “5-drug” oral regimen in children with recurrent or progressive cancer. Procedure Patients ≤21 years old with recurrent or progressive tumors were eligible. Treatment consisted of continuous oral celecoxib, thalidomide, and fenofibrate, with alternating 21-day cycles of low-dose cyclophosphamide and etoposide. Primary endpoint was to assess, within eight disease strata, activity of the 5-drug regimen over 27 weeks. Blood and urine angiogenesis markers were assessed. Results One hundred one patients were enrolled; 97 began treatment. Median age was 10 years (range: 191 days–21 years); 47 (49%) were female. Disease strata included high-grade glioma (HGG, 21 patients), ependymoma (19), low-grade glioma (LGG, 12), bone tumors (12), medulloblastoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET, 8), leukemia (4), neuroblastoma (3), and miscellaneous tumors (18). Treatment was generally well tolerated; most common toxicities were hematologic. Twenty-four (25%) patients completed 27 weeks therapy without progression, including HGG: 1 (5%), ependymoma: 7 (37%), LGG: 7 (58%), medulloblastoma/PNET: 1, neuroblastoma: 1, and miscellaneous tumors: 7 (39%). Best response was complete response (one patient with medulloblastoma), partial response (12), stable disease (36), progressive disease (47), and inevaluable (1). Baseline serum thrombospondin levels were significantly higher in patients successfully completing therapy than in those who progressed (P = 0.009). Conclusion The 5-drug regimen was well tolerated. Clinical activity was demonstrated in some but not all tumor strata. Pediatric Blood Cancer 2014;61:636–642. © 2013 The Authors Pediatric Blood & Cancer Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15455017 and 15455009
Volume :
61
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Blood & Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6a894eda316f55dc76749a3659c670d7