Litcius/Paper detail

A randomized phase 2 study of temsirolimus and cetuximab versus temsirolimus alone in recurrent/metastatic, cetuximab‐resistant head and neck cancer: The MAESTRO study

Tanguy Y. Seiwert, Sara Kochanny, Kevin Wood, Francis P. Worden, Douglas R. Adkins, James L. Wade, Bethany Sleckman, Daniel M. Anderson, Ryan J. Brisson, Theodore Karrison, Walter M. Stadler, Everett E. Vokes

2020Cancer20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients with cetuximab-resistant, recurrent/metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) have poor outcomes. This study hypothesized that dual blockade of mammalian target of rapamycin and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) would overcome cetuximab resistance on the basis of the role of phosphoinositide 3-kinase signaling in preclinical models of EGFR resistance. METHODS: weekly (TC) or single-agent temsirolimus (T). The primary outcome was progression-free survival (PFS) in the TC arm versus the T arm. Response rates, overall survival, and toxicity were secondary outcomes. RESULTS: Eighty patients were randomized to therapy with TC or T alone. There was no difference for the primary outcome of median PFS (TC arm, 3.5 months; T arm, 3.5 months). The response rate was 12.5% in the TC arm (5 responses, including 1 complete response [2.5%]) and 2.5% in the T arm (1 partial response; P = .10). Responses were clinically meaningful in the TC arm (range, 3.6-9.1 months) but not in the T-alone arm (1.9 months). Fatigue, electrolyte abnormalities, and leukopenia were the most common grade 3 or higher adverse events and occurred in less than 20% of patients in both arms. CONCLUSIONS: The study did not meet its primary endpoint of improvement in PFS. However, TC induced responses in cetuximab-refractory patients with good tolerability. The post hoc observation of activity in patients with acquired resistance (after prior benefit from cetuximab monotherapy) may warrant further investigation.

Topics & Concepts

TemsirolimusCetuximabMedicineClinical endpointInternal medicineOncologyHead and neck squamous-cell carcinomaProgression-free survivalPhases of clinical researchHead and neck cancerCancerRandomized controlled trialClinical trialColorectal cancerChemotherapyPI3K/AKT/mTOR pathwayDiscovery and development of mTOR inhibitorsBiochemistryApoptosisChemistryHead and Neck Cancer StudiesOral health in cancer treatmentLung Cancer Treatments and Mutations