FDA Approves Sutent for Resistant GIST and Kidney Cancer

Publication
Article
Oncology NEWS InternationalOncology NEWS International Vol 15 No 2
Volume 15
Issue 2

For the first time, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted a new oncologic drug product approval for indications for two different cancers simultaneously. The agency approved Sutent (suniti-nib, Pfizer) for the treatment of patients with gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) whose disease has progressed on imatinib (Gleevec) or who are unable to tolerate imatinib. It also granted Sutent accelerated approval for treating advanced renal cell carcinoma (RCC).

ROCKVILLE, Maryland-For the first time, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted a new oncologic drug product approval for indications for two different cancers simultaneously. The agency approved Sutent (sunitinib, Pfizer) for the treatment of patients with gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) whose disease has progressed on imatinib (Gleevec) or who are unable to tolerate imatinib. It also granted Sutent accelerated approval for treating advanced renal cell carcinoma (RCC).

Sutent is an oral multikinase inhibitor that inhibits several receptor tyrosine kinases, some of which, studies indicate, play a role in tumor growth, pathologic angiogenesis, and metastatic progression.

FDA acted based on two key findings submitted by Pfizer. An interim trial analysis showed that GIST patients treated with Sutent had a significant delay in the growth of their tumors and the appearance of new ones, compared with patients who did not get the drug. Data from a Sutent RCC study showed that patients with metastatic kidney cancer whose tumors had progressed following cytokine-based therapy had a response rate ranging from 26% to 37%. The accelerated approval granted to Sutent for RCC, however, was based on partial response rates and duration of responses. Thus, as a condition of accelerated approval, Pfizer must carry out postapproval trials to confirm the drug's benefit in patients with advanced kidney cancer.

"Today's approval of this drug for these indications provides compelling evidence that the use of alternative data endpoints allows us to see the benefits of novel therapies earlier in patients," said Richard Pazdur, MD, director of FDA's Office of Oncology Drug Products.

GIST and RCC Studies

Pfizer submitted two studies, designated A and B, to FDA to support its application for the use of Sutent in treating GIST patients. Study A was an international, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial involving 312 GIST patients whose disease had progressed during imatinib treatment or who were intolerant to imatinib. As reported at the 2006 ASCO GI Cancers Symposium (see page 26), a planned interim analysis after 149 events had occurred found a significant advantage for Sutent in time to progression (median 27.3 weeks vs 6.4 weeks for placebo; P < .0001), and progression-free survival (median 24.1 weeks vs 6 weeks for placebo; P < .0001). In study B, an open-label, multicenter, single-arm, dose-escalation study, 55 imatinib resistant or intolerant GIST patients received Sutent 50 mg/d on the same 4-week-on/2-week-off schedule as used in the phase III study: 5 (9.1%) had a partial response.

Pfizer presented two single-arm, multicenter clinical studies, designated 1 and 2, in support of Sutent for the treatment of metastatic RCC in patients who had failed prior cytokine-based therapy.

Study 1 enrolled 106 patients and Study 2 accrued 63 participants. In both studies, patients received 50 mg daily of Sutent on a 4-week-on/2-week-off schedule, and therapy continued until patients met withdrawal criteria or their disease progressed; 97% of the patients in the two studies had undergone nephrectomy.

In Study 1, 27 patients (25.5%) achieved a partial response, as assessed by a core radiology laboratory; Study 2 reported 23 partial responses (36.5%) based on assessments by investigators. The median duration of response was 54 weeks in Study 2 and has not been reached in Study 1.

Sutent was well tolerated in both GIST and RCC. The most commonly reported Sutent-related side effects included diarrhea, skin discoloration, mucositis/stomatitis, asthenia, altered taste, fatigue, hypertension, bleeding, and edema.

Recent Videos
A phase 0 trial is seeking to assess the feasibility of aiding anti-cancer cells with cytokines to restore their function.
Although pembrolizumab addressed a long-standing need in adjuvant kidney cancer treatment, combinations with the agent may further bolster efficacy.
“The trial will be successful, or [we’ll] declare it a success if we see at least 3 of 24 responses overall,” stated Ravi, MD, BChir, MRCP, on the phase 2 LASER trial in RCC.
Success with the 177Lu-PSMA-617 radioligand therapy would be transformative for the clear cell renal cell carcinoma treatment landscape.
An ongoing phase 1 trial seeks to prove XmAb819 as an effective treatment and ENPP3 as a plausible target in patients with relapsed or refractory RCC.
“The therapy is designed to prevent both CAR T-cell inactivation and to restore the anti-tumor immunity of the white blood cells that have gotten through the tumor,” said Marasco, MD, PhD.
Ongoing studies aim to combine base immunotherapy regimens with novel agents to potentially improve outcomes among patients with kidney cancer.
Investigators have found a way to reduce liver and biliary toxicity when targeting the molecule CAIX in patients with clear cell renal cell carcinoma.
Neoantigen-targeting vaccines resulted in an absence of recurrence in 9 patients with high-risk kidney cancer, according to David A. Braun, MD, PhD.
The Kidney Cancer Research Consortium may allow collaborators to form more mechanistic and scientifically driven efforts in the field.
Related Content