Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
The study is intended to show superiority of AZD9833 in combination with palbociclib (a CDK4/6 inhibitor) versus anastrozole (an aromatase inhibitor) and palbociclib as the initial treatment of patients with hormone receptor-positive (ER-positive), human epidermal growth factor 2-negative (HER2-negative) advanced/metastatic breast cancer.
INFORMATION FOR TRIAL PARTICIPANTS
In this trial, the researchers will look at how well camizestrant with palbociclib works, compared with anastrozole with palbociclib, in participants with breast cancer that has either spread into other parts of the body at the time of diagnosis, or has come back after at least 2 years of standard endocrine treatment.
Participants in this trial will have breast cancer that has ER proteins but does not have overexpression of HER2 protein.
Full description
A Randomised, Multicentre, Double-Blind, Phase III study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of AZD9833 (next generation oral SERD) in combination with palbociclib versus anastrozole in combination with palbociclib for the treatment of patients with ER-positive breast cancer. The goal of the study is to demonstrate superiority of AZD9833 over anastrozole in the context of combination with palbociclib in first line setting.
INFORMATION FOR TRIAL PARTICIPANTS
Researchers are looking for a better way to treat breast cancer.
In people with cancer, some cells have grown out of control to form tumours.
The trial drugs palbociclib, camizestrant, and anastrozole are designed to work by blocking the cancer's ability to grow. Camizestrant is also called AZD9833. Palbociclib and anastrozole are already available as treatments for people with certain type of breast cancer.
In this trial, the researchers want to find out how well taking camizestrant with palbociclib, or anastrozole with palbociclib, works in participants with breast cancer that has ER proteins but does not have overexpression of HER2 protein.
The researchers will look at which trial treatments help the participants live longer with cancer before it gets worse.
The trial will split participants into 2 groups:
A placebo looks like a treatment but does not have any medicine in it.
A computer program will be used to randomly choose the treatments each participant gets. This helps make sure the groups are chosen fairly. Researchers do this so that comparing the results of each treatment will be as accurate as possible.
The participants will take their trial treatments in periods called "cycles". Each cycle will last 28 days. During each cycle, the participants will take:
Some participants will also get either goserelin or leuprorelin once every month. Participants could get goserelin or leuprorelin if:
They will get this treatment as an injection under the skin or into a muscle. Goserelin and leuprorelin work by decreasing the amount of sex hormones made by the body which will lead to reduction of ER production. This can help stop breast cancer from growing.
Participants will take trial treatment until the cancer gets worse or they leave the trial.
Participants will visit their trial site several times throughout the trial. At these visits, the trial doctors will check the health of the participants. They will also take blood samples and do scans of the participants' tumors.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA
Full list of inclusion criteria
INFORMATION FOR TRIAL PARTICIPANTS
Participants can join the trial if they:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA
Full list of exclusion criteria
INFORMATION FOR TRIAL PARTICIPANTS
Participants cannot join the trial if they:
The above information is not intended to contain all considerations relevant to a patient's potential participation in a clinical trial.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1,370 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
AZ Breast Cancer Study Navigators; AstraZeneca Clinical Study Information Center
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal