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1: Clin Cancer Res. 2007 Oct 15;13(20):6080-6.Click here to read Links

Pharmacogenomic predictor discovery in phase II clinical trials for breast cancer.

Department of Breast Medical Oncology, the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77230-1439, USA. lpusztai@mdanderson.org

PURPOSE: We examined if supervised analysis of gene expression data from phase II studies could identify HER-2 overexpression as a predictor of response to trastuzumab. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Gene expression data from 132 newly diagnosed breast cancers were used to simulate 50,000 single-agent phase II trastuzumab studies. True HER-2 amplification was assessed by fluorescence in situ hybridization. RESULTS: Only 3.67% of the simulated studies yielded HER-2 as the top predictor, >96% of the individual "studies" picked a different gene as the most predictive of trastuzumab response. HER-2 was included in the top 10 gene list 9.73% of the time. When HER-2 was a priori defined as a potential predictor, 99.6% of the simulated studies confirmed overexpression among responders. Candidate marker testing may be more efficient than de novo predictor discovery in phase II trials. We describe a tandem, two-step phase II trial design for rapid marker assessment that combines two optimal two-stage phase II trials into a single study. In the first stage, unselected patients are treated, and if insufficient responses are seen, the trial remains open for marker-positive patients only and a second two-stage trial commences. CONCLUSIONS: The probability of successful discovery of drug-specific pharmacogenomic response markers in a typical phase II study is small. The evaluation of predefined predictors using tandem two-step phase II design has the advantages of estimating response rates in both unselected and marker-selected patient populations and allows for simultaneous screening of multiple different predictors for the same drug and several distinct predictor-drug pairs in a single, parallel multiarm trial.

PMID: 17947471 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]