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Data from National Cancer Institute Combination Therapy Platform Trial with Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice (ComboMATCH)

Authors :
Jeffrey A. Moscow
Lyndsay N. Harris
James H. Doroshow
Jordan Berlin
Timothy A. Yap
Petros Grivas
Keith T. Flaherty
Bhanumati Ramineni
Douglas S. Hawkins
Robert J. Gray
Stanley R. Hamilton
David Patton
James V. Tricoli
Gary H. Lyman
Julia Glade-Bender
Suzanne George
Roisin E. O'Cearbhaill
Boris Freidlin
Lisa M. McShane
Geoffrey I. Shapiro
Peter J. O'Dwyer
James M. Ford
Funda Meric-Bernstam
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Over the past decade, multiple trials, including the precision medicine trial National Cancer Institute-Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice (NCI-MATCH, EAY131, NCT02465060) have sought to determine if treating cancer based on specific genomic alterations is effective, irrespective of the cancer histology. Although many therapies are now approved for the treatment of cancers harboring specific genomic alterations, most patients do not respond to therapies targeting a single alteration. Further, when antitumor responses do occur, they are often not durable due to the development of drug resistance. Therefore, there is a great need to identify rational combination therapies that may be more effective. To address this need, the NCI and National Clinical Trials Network have developed NCI-ComboMATCH, the successor to NCI-MATCH. Like the original trial, NCI-ComboMATCH is a signal-seeking study. The goal of ComboMATCH is to overcome drug resistance to single-agent therapy and/or utilize novel synergies to increase efficacy by developing genomically-directed combination therapies, supported by strong preclinical in vivo evidence. Although NCI-MATCH was mainly comprised of multiple single-arm studies, NCI-ComboMATCH tests combination therapy, evaluating both combination of targeted agents as well as combinations of targeted therapy with chemotherapy. Although NCI-MATCH was histology agnostic with selected tumor exclusions, ComboMATCH has histology-specific and histology-agnostic arms. Although NCI-MATCH consisted of single-arm studies, ComboMATCH utilizes single-arm as well as randomized designs. NCI-MATCH had a separate, parallel Pediatric MATCH trial, whereas ComboMATCH will include children within the same trial. We present rationale, scientific principles, study design, and logistics supporting the ComboMATCH study.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d95ce7ea2922f53625334065386b4e22
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.c.6533210