Data Show Progression-Free Survival Advantage With Sutent(R) In Patients With Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors

. announced final results from a randomized Phase 3 trial of Sutent () in patients with advanced pancreatic , a which originates in the hormone-producing area of the pancreas. Sunitinib more than doubled the with pancreatic lived without disease progression compared with patients treated with placebo, according to study findings that will be presented tomorrow at the American Society of Clinical Oncology Symposium in Orlando, Florida.

An (DMC) recommended halting the trial in February 2009 because sunitinib showed significant benefit and the primary endpoint was met.

“This trial advances our understanding of the use of novel targeted therapies in a with limited treatment options,” said Dr. Mace Rothenberg, of clinical development and for Pfizer’s Oncology Business Unit. “We are pleased to be working toward filling an unmet , as we did with Sutent four years ago in patients with and .”

The Phase 3 study findings served as the basis for the recent filings of for sunitinib in the treatment of pancreatic with the in the US, Europe and Canada.

Phase 3 Trial Results

This international, Phase 3 trial compared sunitinib with placebo in patients with progressive, well-differentiated, malignant pancreatic . Patients were randomized to either the sunitinib (n=86) (37.5 mg/day, continuous daily dosing) plus best supportive care arm or the placebo plus best supportive care arm (n=85).

Results showed that median progression- (PFS) was 11.4 months in patients treated with sunitinib compared with 5.5 months in patients treated in the placebo arm ( 0.418, p<0.001). Sutent also prolonged overall survival, a secondary endpoint of the trial ( 0.409, p=0.0204).

“The magnitude of Sutent’s benefit in the pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor was an encouraging finding,” said Dr. Eric Raymond, professor of medical oncology and head of University Department of Medical Oncology (Service Inter Hospitalier de Cancerologie) Bichat-Beaujon, Clichy, France, and lead investigator on this sunitinib Phase 3 study. “These findings offer hope to a for whom there are limited treatment options.”

Adverse events were similar to those observed in other sunitinib studies. The most commonly reported grade 3-4 adverse events in the sunitinib arm were neutropenia (12 percent), hypertension (9.6 percent), hand-foot syndrome (6 percent), leukopenia (6 percent) abdominal pain (4.8 percent), diarrhea (4.8 percent), asthenia (4.8 percent), fatigue (4.8 percent) and hypoglycemia (4.8 percent). Grade 5 cardiac failure was experienced by 1.2 percent of the patients in the sunitinib arm.

About Pancreatic

Tumors of the neuroendocrine system are typically classified into two distinct categories: carcinoids or pancreatic . Pancreatic form in the endocrine (hormone-producing) tissues of the pancreas and are separate from exocrine tumors, which account for about 95 percent of all pancreatic cancers.

Pancreatic are fairly rare, and reported in two to four people per million annually worldwide. Subtypes include insulinomas, glucagonomas and gastrinomas. Current treatment options are limited.

About Sutent(®) ()

Sutent is an oral multi-kinase inhibitor approved for the treatment of advanced / metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and the treatment of gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) after disease progression on or intolerance to imatinib mesylate. To date, approximately 82,000 patients globally have been treated with sunitinib in the clinical setting and trials.

Sutent works by blocking multiple molecular targets implicated in the growth, proliferation and spread of cancer. Two important Sutent targets, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR) and platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR), are expressed by many types of solid tumors and are thought to play a crucial role in angiogenesis, the process by which tumors acquire blood vessels, oxygen and nutrients needed for growth. Sutent also inhibits other targets important to tumor growth, including KIT, FLT3 and RET.

Source
Pfizer

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