TKI Famitinib Delays Progression in Advanced Colorectal Cancer

Article

The TKI famitinib was associated with a significant PFS improvement in metastatic colorectal cancer patients, according to the results of a phase II study.

The tyrosine kinase inhibitor famitinib was associated with a significant improvement in progression-free survival among patients with advanced or metastatic colorectal cancer, according to the results of a phase II study conducted in China.

“Famitinib as a single agent treatment improved the progression-free survival by 1.3 months in patients with advanced/metastatic colorectal cancer,” said presenter Rui-Hua Xu, MD, PhD, of Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center, Guangzhou, China, at the 2015 ASCO Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium.

Famitinib is a small molecular, multi-target tyrosine kinase inhibitor that primarily targets VEGFR2, c-KIT, and PDGFR, and acts against angiogenesis. Xu and colleagues designed this study to evaluate the drug’s safety and efficacy in advanced colorectal cancer, the third most frequently diagnosed cancer in China.

The study randomly assigned patients with advanced colorectal cancer 2:1 to famitinib 25 mg (n = 99) or placebo (n = 55) with evaluation of tumor response occurring every 42 days. All patients had failed at least two prior lines of chemotherapy. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival.

Patients assigned to famitinib had a significant improvement in progression-free survival, with a median time to progression of 2.8 months compared with 1.5 months for patients assigned placebo (P = .004). This treatment benefit was consistent across all subgroups of patients analyzed by the researchers.

In addition, patients assigned famitinib had a significantly improved disease control rate compared with patients assigned placebo (59.8% vs 31.4%; P = .0016); however, no difference in overall survival, overall response rate, or in quality of life outcomes were reported between the two arms.

Xu noted though that a trend of prolonged overall survival was observed in a subgroup of patients who previously received had receive 6 or more cycles of first-line chemotherapy or 3 or more cycles of second-line chemotherapy.

The use of famitinib was associated with more adverse events than placebo, including drug-related adverse events leading to discontinuation (13.1% vs 5.5%). The most common adverse events were proteinuria, neutropenia, hypertension, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and hand-foot syndrome. However, the rate of drug-related serious adverse events were similar between the two study arms.

Recent Videos
Epistemic closure, broad-scale distribution, and insurance companies are the 3 largest obstacles to implementing new peritoneal surface malignancy care guidelines into practice.
“This is something where this is written by the trainees, for the trainees, and, of course, for all the other clinicians who take care of patients,” said Kiran Turaga, MD, MPH.
“Everyone—patients, doctors—we all want the same thing. We want [patients] to live longer,” said Kiran Turaga, MD, MPH, on patients with peritoneal surface malignancies.
The new peritoneal surface malignancy care guidelines had clinicians gather from every disease state to show increased representation.
These new guidelines aim to alleviate some of the problems caused by patients with peritoneal metastases being diagnosed with the disease in late stages.
Those being treated for peritoneal carcinomatosis may not have to experience the complication rates or prolonged recovery associated with surgical options.
For patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis, integrating PIPAC into a treatment regimen does not interrupt their systemic therapy.
According to Benjamin J. Golas, MD, PIPAC could be used as a bridging therapy before surgical debulking or between subsequent large surgical operations.
According to Benjamin Golas, MD, PIPAC is emerging as minimally invasive laparoscopic approach for patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis.
Related Content