Journal of Clinical Oncology, volume 40, issue 34

A Randomized, Phase III Trial to Evaluate Rucaparib Monotherapy as Maintenance Treatment in Patients With Newly Diagnosed Ovarian Cancer (ATHENA–MONO/GOG-3020/ENGOT-ov45)

Bradley J. Monk 1
Christine Parkinson 2
Myong Cheol Lim 3
David M. O’Malley 4
Ana Oaknin 5
Michelle K Wilson 6
D. Lorusso 8
Paul Bessette 9
Sharad Ghamande 10
Athina Christopoulou 11
Diane Provencher 12
Emily Prendergast 13
Fuat Demirkiran 14
Olga Mikheeva 15
Oladapo Yeku 16
Anita Chudecka-Glaz 17
Michael Schenker 18
Ramey D. Littell 19
Tamar Safra 20
Hung-Hsueh Chou 21, 22
M A. Morgan 23
Vít Drochýtek 24
Joyce N. Barlin 25
Toon Gorp 26
Frederick R Ueland 27
Gabriel Lindahl 28, 29
Charles Anderson 30
Dearbhaile C. Collins 31
K. P. MOORE 32
Frederik Marmé 33
Shannon N. Westin 34
Iain McNeish 35
Danny Shih 36
Kevin K Lin 37
Sandra Goble 38
Stephanie Hume 39
Keiichi Fujiwara 40
Rebecca Kristeleit 41
Show full list: 39 authors
2
 
Medical Oncology, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, United Kingdom
5
 
Gynaecologic Cancer Programme, Vall d'Hebron Institute of Oncology (VHIO), Hospital Universitari Vall d'Hebron, Vall d'Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus, Barcelona, Spain
7
 
US Oncology Research, The Woodlands, TX
11
 
Medical Oncology, St Andrews General Hospital, Patras, Greece
13
 
Gynecologic Oncology, Minnesota Oncology and Metro-Minnesota Community Oncology Research Consortium, Minneapolis, MN
15
 
Limited Liability Company MedPomosch, Saint Petersburg, Russia
18
 
Department of Medical Oncology, Sfantul Nectarie Oncology Center, Dolj, Romania
19
 
Kaiser Permanente Northern California Gynecologic Cancer Program, San Francisco, CA
21
 
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital (Linkou), Tao-Yuan, Taiwan
25
 
Women's Cancer Care Associates, Division of Gynecologic Oncology, Albany Medical College, Albany, NY
28
 
Nordic Society of Gynaecological Oncology, Copenhagen, Denmark
30
 
Department of Gynecologic Oncology, Willamette Valley Cancer Institute and Research Center, Eugene, OR
36
 
Clinical Operations, Clovis Oncology Inc, Boulder, CO
37
 
Molecular Diagnostics, Clovis Oncology Inc, Boulder, CO
38
 
Biostatistics, Clovis Oncology Inc, Boulder, CO
39
 
Clinical Development, Clovis Oncology Inc, Boulder, CO
40
 
Department of Gynecologic Oncology, Saitama Medical University International Medical Center, Hidaka, Saitama, Japan
41
 
Department of Oncology, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2022-06-06
scimago Q1
SJR10.639
CiteScore41.2
Impact factor42.1
ISSN0732183X, 15277755
PubMed ID:  35658487
Cancer Research
Oncology
Abstract
PURPOSE

ATHENA (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03522246 ) was designed to evaluate rucaparib first-line maintenance treatment in a broad patient population, including those without BRCA1 or BRCA2 (BRCA) mutations or other evidence of homologous recombination deficiency (HRD), or high-risk clinical characteristics such as residual disease. We report the results from the ATHENA–MONO comparison of rucaparib versus placebo.

METHODS

Patients with stage III-IV high-grade ovarian cancer undergoing surgical cytoreduction (R0/complete resection permitted) and responding to first-line platinum-doublet chemotherapy were randomly assigned 4:1 to oral rucaparib 600 mg twice a day or placebo. Stratification factors were HRD test status, residual disease after chemotherapy, and timing of surgery. The primary end point of investigator-assessed progression-free survival was assessed in a step-down procedure, first in the HRD population (BRCA-mutant or BRCA wild-type/loss of heterozygosity high tumor), and then in the intent-to-treat population.

RESULTS

As of March 23, 2022 (data cutoff), 427 and 111 patients were randomly assigned to rucaparib or placebo, respectively (HRD population: 185 v 49). Median progression-free survival (95% CI) was 28.7 months (23.0 to not reached) with rucaparib versus 11.3 months (9.1 to 22.1) with placebo in the HRD population (log-rank P = .0004; hazard ratio [HR], 0.47; 95% CI, 0.31 to 0.72); 20.2 months (15.2 to 24.7) versus 9.2 months (8.3 to 12.2) in the intent-to-treat population (log-rank P < .0001; HR, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.40 to 0.68); and 12.1 months (11.1 to 17.7) versus 9.1 months (4.0 to 12.2) in the HRD-negative population (HR, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.45 to 0.95). The most common grade ≥ 3 treatment-emergent adverse events were anemia (rucaparib, 28.7% v placebo, 0%) and neutropenia (14.6% v 0.9%).

CONCLUSION

Rucaparib monotherapy is effective as first-line maintenance, conferring significant benefit versus placebo in patients with advanced ovarian cancer with and without HRD.

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