Home > Oncology > ASCO GU 2022 > Urothelial Carcinoma > Rucaparib maintenance therapy extends PFS in platinum-responsive metastatic urothelial carcinoma

Rucaparib maintenance therapy extends PFS in platinum-responsive metastatic urothelial carcinoma

Presented by
Dr Simon Crabb, University of Southampton, UK
Conference
ASCO GU 2022
Trial
Phase 2, ATLANTIS
Results from the ATLANTIS trial platform indicated that rucaparib could play a role in the maintenance treatment of metastatic urothelial carcinoma with a DNA repair deficiency that has responded to first-line platinum-based chemotherapy.

A substantial subset of metastatic urothelial carcinomas exhibits a DNA repair deficiency (DRD) phenotype which may predict benefit from platinum-based chemotherapy and sensitivity to PARP inhibition [1,2]. Rucaparib is a potent PARP inhibitor, approved as monotherapy for maintenance treatment of relapsed high-graded epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer following platinum-based chemotherapy [3].

The ATLANTIS trial (ISRCTN25859465) evaluated maintenance therapy with rucaparib following platinum-based chemotherapy in patients who have metastatic urothelial carcinoma harbouring a DRD biomarker and who have derived clinical benefit from platinum-based chemotherapy. ATLANTIS is an adaptive, multi-comparison, phase 2 trial platform [4]. It tests multiple biomarker-selected maintenance therapies for metastatic urothelial carcinoma after 4–8 platinum-based chemotherapy cycles without disease progression. Allocation to the rucaparib comparison was based on ≥10% genomic loss of heterozygosity (%LOH) and/or somatic alteration in defined DRD-associated genes and/or germline BRCA1/2 alteration. Biomarker-positive patients were randomised to maintenance rucaparib (n=20) or matched placebo (n=20) within 10 weeks of completing platinum-based chemotherapy, until disease progression. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival (PFS). Dr Simon Crabb (University of Southampton, UK) presented the final analysis of the rucaparib arm in the ATLANTIS trial [5].

At a median follow-up of 94.6 weeks, 12 (60%) and 20 (100%) PFS events occurred in the rucaparib and placebo arms, respectively. Median PFS was 35.3 weeks with rucaparib and 15.1 weeks with placebo (HR 0.53; P=0.07). A partial response was reported for 1 participant given rucaparib, suggesting that the longer duration of PFS with rucaparib might have been primarily because of maintenance of a pre-existing response to prior chemotherapy rather than producing new objective responses during maintenance treatment.

Treatment-related adverse events were mostly low grade. Rucaparib was tolerable with a median duration of 10 rucaparib or 6 placebo cycles on treatment. The most frequent treatment-related adverse events were more common with rucaparib and included fatigue (63.2% vs 30.0%), nausea (36.9% vs 5.0%), and rash (21.1% vs 0%).

“These results show that maintenance rucaparib, following platinum-based chemotherapy, extended PFS in DRD biomarker-selected patients with metastatic urothelial carcinoma and is tolerable,” concluded Dr Crabb. “Further investigation of PARP inhibition for this indication is warranted.”

  1. Robertson AG, et al. Cell. 2017;171:540–556.
  2. Rimar KJ, et al. Cancer. 2017;123:1912–1924.
  3. Coleman RL, et al. Lancet. 2017;390:1949–1961.
  4. Fulton B, et al. Trials 2020;21:344.
  5. Crabb SJ, et al. A randomized, double blind, biomarker selected, phase II clinical trial of maintenance PARP inhibition following chemotherapy for metastatic urothelial carcinoma (mUC): Final analysis of the ATLANTIS rucaparib arm. Abstract 436, ASCO GU 2022, 17–19 February.

 

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