Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
To evaluate the safety of secondary chemotherapy induced thrombocytopenia (reduction in platelets which leads to bleeding) prophylaxis with romiplostim in ovarian cancer subjects receiving myelosuppressive (blood cell damaging) chemotherapy.It is anticipated that Romiplostim, when administered at an effective dose and schedule, will be a well-tolerated treatment for subjects experiencing chemotherapy-induced thrombocytopenia.
Full description
Chemotherapy of recurrent ovarian cancer leads to severe thrombocytopenia in a considerable proportion of the patients, requiring treatment delays or dose reductions, and placing the patient at a high risk of bleeding complications. The amount of thrombocytopenia is highly schedule-dependent. In platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer that relapsed more than 6 months after end of primary therapy, a platinum containing reinduction therapy - the combination of paclitaxel/carboplatin, gemcitabine/carboplatin or PLD/carboplatin - is recommended according to the current AGO guidelines or recent ASCO presentations. Especially the latter two regimens often induce severe and even dose-limiting myelosuppression, including thrombocytopenia. Therefore, prophylaxis, or at least secondary prophylaxis of this toxicity is an important goal of supportive therapy. The use of platelet transfusions is limited by cost, supply problems, and associated risks, such as transfusion reactions, transmission of infection, and alloimmunization and platelet refractoriness. In contrast to the situation for the red and white blood cell compartments, the implementation of growth factor treatment in order to ameliorate the therapy of thrombocytopenia and its complications, is yet very limited. Romiplostim is an active second-generation thrombopoietic agent without safety problems due to immunogenicity, which proved to be beneficial in the treatment of immune thrombocytopenic purpura and myelodysplastic syndromes. The rationale of this trial is to obtain evidence that romiplostim can improve platelet counts/recovery in the treatment of recurrent ovarian cancer. Due to the fact, that the expected occurrence of severe thrombocytopenia and its complications may heavily depend on the selection of patient and their characteristics such as actually chosen treatment schedule, tumor stage, extent of metastasis, pre-treatment etc. a phase II design comparing the results to historical data or expectations is insufficient. A simple within-group control design, comparing subsequent cycles of the same patients with or without the supportive experimental drug may also be flawed, as "spontaneous" improvements after obviously unchanged chemotherapy are often observed. With some regimens, the first cycle proves to be generally more toxic than later ones. On the other hand, regimens may result in cumulative myelosuppression. A design including a randomized doubleblind control group is therefore warranted, moreover, as platelet counts represent a sensitive and valid surrogate marker for a clinical benefit. The current study will employ a model of secondary prophylaxis. The enrolment of subjects with grade 3 and/or 4 thrombocytopenia will facilitate an assessment of the ability of romiplostim to impact thrombocytopenia at clinically significant levels, which warrant the administration of platelet transfusions, dose reduction, and dose delay.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Women ≥ 18 years of age
Before any study-specific procedure, the appropriate written informed consent must be obtained, according to ICH-GCP, and national/local regulation
ANC ≥ 1,000/μl, Hgb ≥ 9.5 g/dl, and platelet count ≥ 100 x 109/l on day 1 of the first on study cycle of the chemotherapy treatment (on-study cycle) (Thrombocytopenia have to be defined during a "qualifying cycle"; qualifying cycle could be the 1st or the 2nd cycle of the palliative chemotherapy; thrombocytopenia as evidenced by a platelet count < 50 x 109/l during the qualifying cycle of chemotherapy OR platelet count < 100 x 109/l on the planned starting day of the next cycle of chemotherapy (or 1-3 days before), requiring dose delay for platelet recovery.)
Subjects with histologically confirmed advanced or metastatic ovarian cancer, fallopian tube cancer, peritoneal carcinoma or ovarian carcinosarcoma who are receiving 2nd or further line chemotherapy consisting of one of the following regimens according to established dosing standards:
Thrombocytopenia as evidenced by a platelet count < 50 x 109/l during the qualifying cycle of chemotherapy OR platelet count < 100 x 109/l on the planned starting day of the next cycle of chemotherapy (or 1-3 days before), requiring dose delay for platelet recovery; qualifying cycle could be the 1st or the 2nd cycle of chemotherapy
Life expectancy ≥ 12 weeks at the time of screening
Ability to receive the same dose and schedule of chemotherapy during the first on study treatment cycle as was given in the qualifying cycle(s). (In case of grade 4 thrombocytopenia: a dose reduction to ≥75% of the previous dose schedule is allowed.)
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
21 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal