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About
Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the ninth most common cause of cancer in Australian women, with an estimated 1500 new diagnoses in Australia in 2015, and remains the seventh most common cause of cancer death in Australian women. High grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSC) is the most common form of Epithelial Ovarian Cancer, and accounts for the most deaths due to a gynaecological cancer.
The majority of women diagnosed with High Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer present with advanced disease, and are typically managed with a combination of cytoreductive surgery and platinum-based chemotherapy. Despite initial good response rates to chemotherapy, High Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer recurs in up to 70% of patients who present with Stage III/IV disease.
The purpose of this research project is to test how safe and effective the combination treatment of cobimetinib, bevacizumab and atezolizumab is as a treatment for patients with platinum resistant or refractory high grade serous ovarian, fallopian tube or peritoneal cancer.
Cobimetinib is a drug that blocks a protein called Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MEK). MEK proteins are involved in the multiplication of cancer cells. By binding to the MEK protein, cobimetinib may help to stop the growth of your cancer cells.
Bevacizumab is an antibody (a type of protein produced by the immune system) that is specifically designed to block a protein called Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF). VEGF is a protein that can increase the growth of tumour cells and binding to VEGF may help to stop the growth of tumours.
Atezolizumab is a type of drug called a Programmed Cell Death Protein 1 (PD-L1) inhibitor. PD-L1 binds to PD-1 which is a type of protein found on the surface of cells in your body's immune system, and it controls the ability of your body's natural immune response to trigger the death of tumour cells. Tumour cells can hide from the immune system by using PD-L1, which stops your immune system from triggering tumour cell death.
Atezolizumab is a drug designed to block this PD-1/PD-L1 interaction by binding to PD-L1 so that PD-1 cannot bind to it and stops it from turning off your immune cells. This helps your immune system to recognise and destroy tumour cells. In turn, this potentially can stop or reverse the growth of your cancer.
Cobimetinib, bevacizumab and atezolizumab have been used alone or in combination in the treatment of many other cancers. Each of them are individually licensed for the treatment of cancers such as advanced melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, and bladder cancer in Australia. However, this treatment combination is experimental and is not approved to treat ovarian, fallopian tube or peritoneal cancers in any country.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Patient has provided written informed consent
Able to comply with the study protocol and follow-up procedures, in the investigator's judgement
Female patients aged ≥ 18 years at screening
Patients with a histological diagnosis of invasive high grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSC) including fallopian tube and primary peritoneal cancers, as defined by histological diagnosis and immunohistochemistry profile consistent with high grade serous cancer:
Platinum resistant or refractory recurrent disease defined by GCIG CA-125 criteria or RECIST v1.1 disease progression on or within 6 months of last platinum-based chemotherapy.
Disease that is measurable according to RECIST 1.1 and amenable to biopsy (note that lesions intended to be biopsied should not be target lesions).
Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0 or 1
Life expectancy greater than 3 months
Adequate hematologic and organ function, defined by the following laboratory results obtained within 7 days prior to registration
Absence of clinically significant proteinuria as demonstrated by urine dipstick ≤ 1+ or < 1.0g of protein in a 24-hour urine collection
Patients with ≥2+ protein on dipstick analysis at baseline must undergo a 24-hour urine collection for protein and will remain eligible if <1.0g of protein is detected within 2 weeks of randomisation
Negative test results for Viral Hepatitis:
Negative hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) test at screening
Negative total hepatitis B core antibody (HBcAb) test at screening, or positive total HBcAb test followed by a negative hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA test at screenin.The HBV DNA test will be performed only for patients who have a positive total HBcAb test.
Negative hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibody test at screening, or positive HCV antibody test followed by a negative HCV RNA test at screening.The HCV RNA test will be performed only for patients who have a positive HCV antibody test.
Female participants must be postmenopausal (≥ 12 months of non-therapy-induced amenorrhoea) or surgically sterile (absence of ovaries and/or uterus, or who received therapeutic radiation to the pelvis) or otherwise have a negative serum pregnancy test within 14 days of the first study treatment and agree to abstain from heterosexual intercourse or use two effective contraceptive methods that result in a failure rate of <1% per year during the whole treatment period of the study and for at least 3 months (if the last study dose contained cobimetinib), 5 months (if the last study dose contained atezolizumab) or 6 months (if the last study dose contained bevacizumab) after the last dose of study treatment. Women must refrain from donating eggs during this same period.
Patients must have recovered to ≤ grade 1 from their treatment-related AE with the exception of alopecia.
Has consented to the use of their collected fresh tumour biopsies, archival FFPE specimen, ascites and peripheral blood samples as detailed in the protocol for translational research, including but not limited to DNA, RNA and protein based biomarker detection.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
30 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Laura Galletta; George Au-Yeung
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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