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2. Agenda. Introduction and Objectives Management of Ovarian Cancer Clinical Efficacy of Gemzar/CarboplatinSafety Results and Patient Benefit Robustness of Efficacy Results Risk/Benefit Overview. 8002.01. Richard Gaynor, MD Vice President, Oncology Lilly Research
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1. Gemzar® in Combination with Carboplatin as Treatment for Women with Recurrent Ovarian CancerMarch 13, 2006Richard Gaynor, MDVice President, Global Oncology Lilly Research LaboratoriesOncologic Drugs Advisory Committee Presentation
2. 2 Agenda Introduction and Objectives
Management of Ovarian Cancer
Clinical Efficacy of Gemzar/Carboplatin
Safety Results and Patient Benefit
Robustness of Efficacy Results
Risk/Benefit Overview
3. 3 Expert Participants Eli Lilly and Company
Medical
Richard Gaynor, MD
Marek Kania, MD, MBA
Martin Marciniak, PhD
Allen Melemed, MD
Regulatory Affairs
Cheryl Beal Anderson, PharmD
Colleen Mockbee, RPh
Statistics
James Symanowski, PhD
Annamaria Zimmermann, MS
4. 4 Ovarian Cancer Supplemental NDA
5. 5 Gemzar sNDA Ovarian Cancer
6. 6 Regulatory Background Historically, overall response rate has been primarily used in this setting. Lilly met with the FDA in late 2004 and reviewed the trial design and results. FDA agreed the data package met criteria for submission. Today we plan to discuss that the totality of the data which we feel supports full approval of Gem/Carbo for woman with recurrent ovarian cancer.Historically, overall response rate has been primarily used in this setting. Lilly met with the FDA in late 2004 and reviewed the trial design and results. FDA agreed the data package met criteria for submission. Today we plan to discuss that the totality of the data which we feel supports full approval of Gem/Carbo for woman with recurrent ovarian cancer.
7. 7 Background on Gemzar Pyrimidine anti-metabolite with broad activity across numerous tumor types
Over 1.3 million patients treated globally with Gemzar
FDA regular approvals for:
Pancreas (single agent – 1996)
NSCLC (combination with cisplatin – 1998)
Metastatic Breast Cancer (combination with paclitaxel – 2004)
Gemzar plus carboplatin (GCb) combinations are used extensively in lung, breast, and bladder cancers
Gemzar as a single agent, and in combination with carboplatin, has been extensively studied in ovarian cancer
Safety profile well-characterized with relatively low toxicity
8. 8 Objectives of Presentation
9. 9 Management of Ovarian Cancer
Robert Ozols, MD, PhD Sr. Vice President Medical Science Fox Chase Cancer Center
10. 10 Ovarian Cancer – Current Clinical Practice
11. 11 Chemotherapy for Platinum-Resistant Disease
12. 12 Efficacy Results of Select Single-Agent Chemotherapies in Ovarian Cancer Efficacy results from registration trials for approved agents in recurrent ovarian cancer, according to their package insertEfficacy results from registration trials for approved agents in recurrent ovarian cancer, according to their package insert
13. 13 Gemzar Monotherapy: Recurrent Ovarian Cancer Gemzar monotherapy efficacy results in platinum-resistant disease are comparable to already approved agents
Less toxic regimen, very few transfusionsGemzar monotherapy efficacy results in platinum-resistant disease are comparable to already approved agents
Less toxic regimen, very few transfusions
14. 14 Chemotherapy for Platinum-Sensitive Disease and Combination Therapy
15. 15 AGO-OVAR Development of Gemzar
16. 16 PFS for Evaluation of Ovarian Cancer Agents
17. 17 Clinical Efficacy
Pivotal Study JHQJ / OVAR 2.5
Allen Melemed, MD
Associate Medical Director,Eli Lilly and Co.
18. 18 GCb Submission for Recurrent Ovarian Cancer
19. 19 Study Design for JHQJ / OVAR 2.5
20. 20 Key Trial Features: Study Endpoints Randomized Phase 3 study
AGO, NCIC-CTG, EORTC
12 countries, 105 investigators
Primary Endpoint: PFS
Time from randomization to progressive disease (PD) or death
Patients who were alive without PD were censored at last visit
85% power to detect 41% improvement in PFS (HR=0.71) at ?=0.05 (requiring ~300 events)
Secondary Endpoints:
Overall survival
Response rate
PRO (measured by EORTC QLQ-C30, OV28 instruments)
Toxicity
21. 21 Methodology for Disease Assessment for Study JHQJ / OVAR 2.5
22. 22 Patient Characteristics for JHQJ / OVAR 2.5
23. 23 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5 Primary Endpoint: Progression-Free Survival
24. 24 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5 Efficacy Results: Overall Survival
25. 25 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5 Post-Discontinuation Therapy
26. 26 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Overall Response Rate
27. 27 Efficacy Conclusions
28. 28 Safety Results and Patient Benefit
Pivotal Study JHQJ / OVAR 2.5
Richard Gralla, MD Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer
29. 29 Objectives Patient safety
Toxicities and adverse events
Significant consequences
Translating PFS improvement to patient benefit
Patient reported outcomes
Time off chemotherapy
30. 30 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Selected Grade 3/4 Toxicities Regardless of Causality
31. 31 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Maximum CTC Neurotoxicity in Patients with Pre-Existing Neuropathy at Baseline
32. 32 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Overview of Adverse Events
33. 33 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Selected Grade 3/4 Non-Laboratory Toxicities Regardless of Causality
34. 34 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Overview of Hospitalizations and Deaths
35. 35 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5 Safety Conclusions
36. 36 Patient Benefit Patient reported outcomes
EORTC QLQ-C30 cancer specific instrument (validated – Aaronson, 1993 and Groenvold, 1997)
EORTC QLQ-OV28 ovarian specific instrument (validated – Cull, 2001 and Greimel, 2003)
AUC
Analysis to 10-Point Change
Time off chemotherapy
Duration of time patients were off chemotherapy
37. 37 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Patient Reported Outcome Assessment Methodology Total of 22 symptom scales included in the EORTC QLQ-OV28 and EORTC QLQ-C30
Symptoms most relevant to ovarian patients
Nausea/vomiting
Constipation
Diarrhea
Abdominal / GI (i.e. bloating)
Fatigue
Pain
Anorexia
Study designed to treat patients for 6 cycles or to progression
Compliance rate completing PRO instrument ~90%
38. 38 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Percent of Patients with Symptoms* at Baseline
39. 39 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: AUC Results for QoL Scales/Items Relevant to Ovarian Cancer
40. 40 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5 - Global Quality of Life: 10-Point Changes (% Improved and Time to Worsening)
41. 41 Patient Benefit Patient reported outcomes
EORTC QLQ-C30 cancer specific instrument (validated – Aaronson, 1993 and Groenvold, 1997)
EORTC QLQ-OV28 ovarian specific instrument (validated – Cull, 2001 and Greimel, 2003)
AUC
Analysis to 10-Point Change
Time Off Chemotherapy
Duration of time patients were off chemotherapy
42. 42 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Time Off Chemotherapy
43. 43 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Patient Benefit Conclusions
44. 44
Robustness of JHQJ / OVAR 2.5 Efficacy Results
Daniel J Sargent, PhD
Director, Cancer Center StatisticsMayo Clinic, Rochester
45. 45 Objectives
46. 46 Robustness of PFS Results in Study JHQJ / OVAR 2.5
47. 47 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Sensitivity Analysis Including Only Objective Progressions (SA1)
48. 48 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Sensitivity Analysis Including Only Documented Objective Progressions (SA3)
49. 49 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Summary of New Sensitivity Analyses for PFS
50. 50 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Internal Consistency of PFS in Subgroups
51. 51 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Independent Assessment of Response Rate
52. 52 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Response in Independently Reviewed Cohort (Investigator vs Independent)
53. 53 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Response Rate in Independently Reviewed Cohort
54. 54 Conclusions
55. 55 Concluding Remarks
Benefit-Risk Summary:
OVAR 2.5 in Context
Tate Thigpen, MD
Professor of Medicine, University of Mississippi School of Medicine
56. 56 PFS is an Appropriate Measure of Treatment Activity in Ovarian Cancer
57. 57 Gynecologic Cancer Intergroup Ovarian Cancer Consensus Conference- 2004
58. 58 PFS is an Appropriate Measure of Treatment Activity in Ovarian Cancer
59. 59 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5 Efficacy Results
60. 60 Impact of Subsequent Chemotherapy on Survival for Recurrent Ovarian Cancer Subsequent therapy for ovarian cancer may impact survival results
Cisplatin vs paclitaxel vs paclitaxel/cisplatin
Dox/Cyclo vs Cis/Dox/Cyclo
Frequency of subsequent therapy in studies of platinum-sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer
ICON 4 (3rd line therapy not reported)
Standard practice in UK would be no 3rd-line therapy
JHQJ / OVAR 2.5 (75% patients received 3rd-line therapy)
61. 61 Advancing the Treatment of Recurrent Ovarian Cancer
62. 62 GCb is a Valuable Treatment Option for Patients with Recurrent Ovarian Cancer
63. Back ups presented
64. 64 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Pre- and Post-Discontinuation Assessment Intervals
65. 65 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Clinical versus Objective Progressions
66. 66 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: Measurement Methods at Baseline
67. 67 JHQJ / OVAR 2.5: EORTC QLQ-C30 Within Arm Changes Over Time