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This is a two stage study, with an initial dose escalation phase I study and subsequent double blind randomised phase II controlled trial. Eligible patients are post-menopausal women with metastatic ER+ breast cancer not suitable for surgical resection. Patients should be suitable for endocrine treatment, but have received no more than 3 previous lines of endocrine treatment and up to 1 line of chemotherapy for metastatic disease. They will also have had progressive disease during treatment with an aromatase inhibitor. Following the dose-escalation in stage 1, patients will be randomised to receive fulvestrant plus either placebo or 480mg (or maximum tolerated dose) of AZD5363 oral capsules or tablets taken once daily.
Patients will receive fulvestrant in combination with either placebo or AZD5363 until disease progression. Patients may continue to receive fulvestrant and AZD5363/placebo treatment even after the last trial visit.
Full description
Phase 1 (n=9-12)
As fulvestrant and AZD5363 have not previously been administered to this population, we have incorporated an initial phase I dose escalation:
Phase 2 (n=136)
Recruitment in to Phase 2 will commence after all 6 patients in Stage 1 have completed at least 1 cycle of therapy and the SRC have given the go-ahead. Patients will be randomised to one of two arms:
Arm A (control arm): Fulvestrant + placebo The control arm will consist continuous 28 day cycles of fulvestrant 500mg on day 1, plus placebo capsule or tablet bd 4 days on and 3 days off.
Arm B (experimental arm): Fulvestrant + AZD5363 The experimental arm will consist continuous 28 day cycles of fulvestrant 500mg on day 1, plus AZD5363 capsule or tablet bd 4 days on and 3 days off.
A further safety assessment will be made after 20 patients have been randomised to receive AZD5363 or placebo and have at least 1 cycle of protocol treatment in stage 2.
Phase 2 will have 3 stages, this is because we want to investigate whether tumours with certain characteristics are more likely to respond to the AZD5363. As mentioned above, we will test the tumour tissue for the presence of a PIK3CA mutation (a gene encoding catalytic subunit of class 1 PI3K) and for low levels of phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN). Laboratory research has shown that tumours with these characteristics may respond better to the AZD5363. Tumours which do not have these characteristics are called wild-type, and we want to make sure we don't recruit too many of these patients if they might not benefit from the treatment.
We will start off by recruiting all eligible patients. However, when we know that we have 40 patients with wild-type tumours, and they have been on trial treatment for eight weeks, we will stop recruiting patients with wild-type tumours. This means that we will do a blood test to confirm the tumour has the PIK3CA mutation before a patient can be entered onto the study.
We will perform a review of the tumour measurements in this wild-type group to determine whether the tumours of the patients receiving AZD5363 have shrunk more than patients receiving placebo. If there is no evidence that the tumour has shrunk in the AZD5363 group compared to placebo, we will not recruit any more patients with wild-type tumours. If there is evidence that that the tumours have shrunk in the AZD5363 group, we will start recruiting patients with wild-type tumours again.
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149 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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