FDA Grants Priority Review for Rucaparib as Ovarian Cancer Maintenance Therapy

Article

The FDA has granted priority review status to rucaparib as maintenance therapy for women with recurrent ovarian cancer, according to the drug’s developer.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted priority review status to rucaparib as maintenance therapy for women with recurrent ovarian cancer, according to the drug’s developer. The application is for women who are platinum sensitive, and in complete or partial response to platinum chemotherapy.

“We are pleased that we continue to make significant progress toward our goal of delivering rucaparib to a much broader population of women with advanced ovarian cancer,” said Patrick J. Mahaffy, the president and CEO of Clovis Oncology, in a press release.

The priority review was granted based on results of the ARIEL3 trial, which were published in September in Lancet. The trial was a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled phase III study conducted in 11 countries that included 564 patients.

All patients were in complete or partial response to platinum-based chemotherapy, and received either daily rucaparib (375 patients) or placebo (189 patients) in 28-day cycles.

In the intention-to-treat population, the median progression-free survival was 10.8 months with rucaparib and 5.4 months with placebo, for a hazard ratio of 0.36 (95% CI, 0.30–0.45; P < .0001). The drug was also significantly better specifically in patients with BRCA-mutant carcinoma, and in patients with a homologous recombination–deficient carcinoma.

Treatment-emergent adverse events of grade 3 or higher were reported in 56% of rucaparib patients and in 15% of placebo patients. Anemia with decreased hemoglobin concentration was the most common of these, occurring in 19% of rucaparib patients and in 1% of placebo patients.

In Lancet, the authors wrote that “the use of a PARP inhibitor in the maintenance treatment setting … could be considered a new standard of care for women with platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer following a complete or partial response to second-line or later platinum-based chemotherapy.”

Rucaparib received FDA approval in December 2016 for the treatment of women with deleterious BRCA mutation–associated ovarian cancer who had received at least two prior chemotherapy regimens. The FDA has set a date of action for the new indication of maintenance therapy of April 6, 2018. 

Recent Videos
A prospective trial may help affirm ctDNA as a non-invasive option of predicting responses to radiotherapy among those with gynecologic cancers.
ctDNA reductions or clearance also appeared to correlate with a decrease in disease burden during the pre-boost phase of radiotherapy.
Investigators evaluated ctDNA as a potentially noninvasive method to predict response to radiotherapy among those with gynecologic malignancies.
The Foundation for Women’s Cancer provides multicultural resources for patients with gynecologic cancers to help address gaps in care.
Ginger J. Gardner, MD, FACOG, addresses the growing uterine cancer cases among patients in the United States and the need for greater genetic testing.
Ginger J. Gardner, MD, FACOG, discussed the state of gynecologic cancers and her role in empowering research, education, and awareness surrounding them.
Brian Slomovitz, MD, MS, FACOG discusses the use of new antibody drug conjugates for treating patients with various gynecologic cancers.
Developing novel regimens may continue to improve survival outcomes of patients with advanced cervical cancer following the FDA approval of pembrolizumab and chemoradiation, says Jyoti S. Mayadev, MD.
Related Content