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Study Objectives: To compare the efficacy and safety outcome of newly diagnosed GBM patients treated with NovoTTF-200A concomitant to RT and TMZ to those treated with RT and TMZ alone Study Design: Prospective, randomized, open label, standard of care control Study Hypothesis: The hypothesis of this study is that addition of NovoTTF-200A treatment to RT and TMZ will significantly increase progression free survival of newly diagnosed GBM patients compared to patients treated with RT and TMZ alone Sample Size: 60 patients with newly diagnosed GBM Study Population: Patients with tissue based diagnosis of GBM, above 18 years of age, of both genders after surgery or biopsy amenable for radiation therapy (RT) with concomitant TMZ (Stupp protocol1)
Primary endpoint:
Rate of progression-free survival at 12 months (PFS12)
Secondary endpoints:
Full description
Glioblastoma (GBM), a malignant form of astrocytoma, is the most common primary intracranial neoplasm in adults2. The incidence of GBM increases steadily above 45 years of age with a prevalence of approximately 7500 cases in the USA. Despite numerous attempts to improve the outcome of patients with GBM, the 3-year survival of patients treated with maximal surgical resection when feasible, 60 Gy radiotherapy (RT) together with concomitant temozolomide (TMZ) (RT/TMZ), followed by maintenance (adjuvant) TMZ for 6 months was only 6% with median survival of 14.6 months1. In a prospective phase 3 trial, the addition of TTFields (200 kHz) to maintenance temozolomide increased the median overall survival of patients enrolled in the study following RT/TMZ to 20.9 months, compared with 16.0 months only in the temozolomide-alone group (HR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.53-0.76; P < .001).
TTFields are a novel treatment modality for the treatment of malignant tumors that is also referred to as the fourth modality of cancer treatment in addition to surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy. Pre-clinical studies3-9 have shown this treatment modality to effectively inhibit the growth of experimental tumors both in-vitro and in-vivo without any systemic side effects. Large-scale, phase III clinical studies have validated the safety and efficacy of TTFields in patients with recurrent and newly diagnosed glioblastoma10,11. TTFields has now been approved as a standard treatment for GBM by most of the regulatory agencies around the world and its application is steadily increasing worldwide.
Standard Treatment of GBM
The currently accepted standard treatment of newly diagnosed GBM is based on: surgical resection to the extent safely feasible followed by RT with concomitant TMZ, followed by adjuvant TMZ chemotherapy in combination with TTFields. Each of these treatments is briefly described below:
Surgical resection - Treatment of patients with GBM usually consists of tumor resection (to the extent safely feasible) or diagnostic biopsy.
Radiotherapy (RT) - Post-surgical RT improves survival, though even with maximal treatment, survival after RT alone is still limited to about one year1.
Temozolomide (TMZ) - Concomitant TMZ chemotherapy during RT and adjuvant (maintenance) TMZ for 6 cycles has been shown to significantly improve survival (HR 0.63). This combined modality treatment is considered the standard of care.
GLIADEL™ Wafers in combination with surgical resection - Gliadel™ Wafers deliver carmustine (BCNU) directly to the bed of the resected tumor. Gliadel has been approved for GBM after surgical resection, based on trials performed before TMZ therapy was established13.
a. The package insert indicates that for newly diagnosed GBM, Gliadel™ increased median overall survival from 11.6 to 13.9 months compared to placebo. Progression-free survival with Gliadel™ wafers has been reported as 5.9 months27. No prospective data of Gliadel™ in combination with TMZ has been reported.
TTFields - Clinical trials of TTFields have proven safe and efficacious in patients with recurrent and newly diagnosed GBM. The median OS in the large scale phase III clinical study in newly diagnosed GBM patients (EF-14) was 20.9 months in the TTFields plus TMZ group vs. 16 months in the TMZ alone group11. Accordingly, TTFields (Optune®) are now FDA-approved for use in newly diagnosed and recurrent GBM.
In conclusion, despite the improvement in OS following the introduction of TTFields into the standard of care for newly diagnosed GBM patients, the survival of most patients remains poor. Therefore, new treatments, as well as strategies for maximizing the benefit from currently available therapies are needed.
STUDY DESIGN A prospective, randomly controlled pivotal study will be conducted on 60 patients (randomized at a 1:1 ratio). Patients with histologically confirmed GBM will be randomized after debulking surgery or biopsy to either RT with concomitant TMZ and TTFields (200 kHz) for 6 weeks followed by up to 24 months of maintenance TMZ in combination with TTFields (experimental arm), or RT with concomitant TMZ alone followed by maintenance TMZ chemotherapy in combination with TTFields (control). The primary endpoint will be rate of progression free survival at 12 months (PFS12). The sample size was chosen based on the Exact test for proportion (See XX Statistical Considerations). In short, in order to detect a PFS12 of 46.5% in patients treated with RT/TMZ/TTFields followed by maintenance TMZ+TTFields, compared to the 29.4% calculated from the EF-14 experimental arm of patients treated with RT/TMZ alone followed by maintenance TMZ+TTFields, a sample size of 60 patients randomized in a ratio of 1:1 (30 patients in each arm) is required to achieve a power of 80% at two-sided alpha level of 0.05 using the Exact test for proportion.
The following will be considered disease progression (based on the RANO criteria; Tab D):
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60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Carmit Ben Harosh; Rachel Grossman, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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