Veliparib Plus Chemotherapy Fails in Lung, Breast Cancer

Article

Adding the PARP inhibitor veliparib to carboplatin and paclitaxel chemotherapy regimens failed to prolong overall survival in lung and breast cancers.

Adding the investigational oral poly-ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitor veliparib to carboplatin and paclitaxel chemotherapy regimens failed to prolong overall survival for patients with metastatic squamous non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and early-stage triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), according to findings from two multicenter randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase III clinical trials announced by AbbVie.

“Unfortunately, these data do not support the use of veliparib in combination with chemotherapy in these patients,” said Gary Gordon, MD, PhD, AbbVie’s vice president of oncology clinical development, in a press release.1

Phase III clinical trials of veliparib plus chemotherapy are ongoing for non-squamous NSCLC, BRCA1/2 mutation-positive breast cancer and ovarian cancer, the company noted.

Veliparib inhibits the DNA-repair enzyme PARP.

The squamous NSCLC study had enrolled 970 patients and the TNBC study enrolled 312 patients. The NSCLC study stratified participants by tobacco-smoking history and the primary study endpoint was overall survival among patients who had smoked in the past year and had more than 100 smoking events in their lifetime, but the researchers also analyzed outcomes for the entire intent-to-treat study population.

For TNBC patients, they were randomized to one of three arms: veliparib combined with carboplatin and paclitaxel, placebo combined with carboplatin and paclitaxel, or placebo combined only with paclitaxel, all followed by doxorubicin plus cyclophosphamide.

The studies’ detailed results will be presented at research meetings and published in a peer-reviewed journal, the company announced.

 

References:

AbbVie Pressroom. AbbVie Announces Topline Results from Two Phase 3 Studies Investigating Veliparib in Combination with Chemotherapy for the Treatment of Patients with Advanced or Metastatic Squamous Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer and Early-Stage Triple-Negative Breast Cancer. 2017 Apr 19.

 

Recent Videos
The FirstLook liquid biopsy, when used as an adjunct to low-dose CT, may help to address the unmet need of low lung cancer screening utilization.
An 80% sensitivity for lung cancer was observed with the liquid biopsy, with high sensitivity observed for early-stage disease, as well.
Patients who face smoking stigma, perceive a lack of insurance, or have other low-dose CT related concerns may benefit from blood testing for lung cancer.
Heather Zinkin, MD, states that reflexology improved pain from chemotherapy-induced neuropathy in patients undergoing radiotherapy for breast cancer.
Study findings reveal that patients with breast cancer reported overall improvement in their experience when receiving reflexology plus radiotherapy.
Patients undergoing radiotherapy for breast cancer were offered 15-minute nurse-led reflexology sessions to increase energy and reduce stress and pain.
Whole or accelerated partial breast ultra-hypofractionated radiation in older patients with early breast cancer may reduce recurrence with low toxicity.
Ultra-hypofractionated radiation in those 65 years or older with early breast cancer yielded no ipsilateral recurrence after a 10-month follow-up.
The unclear role of hypofractionated radiation in older patients with early breast cancer in prior trials incentivized research for this group.
Patients with HR-positive, HER2-positive breast cancer and high-risk features may derive benefit from ovarian function suppression plus endocrine therapy.
Related Content