Investigator

Adriaan Vanderstichele

European Union

About

AVAdriaan Vandersti…
Papers(1)
GANNET53 Part II: A E…
Collaborators(10)
Alain Gustave ZeimetAtanas IgnatovChristian MarthDaniela KramerEls Van NieuwenhuysenEric Pujade LauraineEva ObermayrFlorence JolyFrédéric SelleHanno Ulmer
Institutions(10)
European UnionMedical University In…University Hospital M…Tirol KlinikenJohannes Gutenberg Un…Arcagy GinecoMedical University of…Centre François Bacle…Groupe Hospitalier Di…Innsbruck Medical Uni…

Papers

GANNET53 Part II: A European Phase I/II Trial of the HSP90 Inhibitor Ganetespib in High-Grade Platinum-Resistant Ovarian Cancer—A Study of the GANNET53 Consortium

Abstract Purpose: Mutant p53 stabilized by heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) is a novel target in oncology. The open-label, randomized phase II GANNET53 trial is the first to evaluate the HSP90 inhibitor ganetespib (G) with paclitaxel (P) in platinum-resistant epithelial ovarian cancer (EUDRACT 2013-003868-31; EU FP7 #602602). Patients and Methods: Patients were randomized 2:1 to receive G + P or P alone until progression. Primary endpoints were progression-free survival (PFS) and PFS rate at 6 months. Exploratory endpoints were biomarkers based on p53 and HSP90. Results: A total of 133 patients were enrolled. The median PFS was 3.5 (G + P) and 5.3 months (P) (HR = 1.3; 95% confidence interval, 0.897–1.895; P = 0.16), and PFS rates at 6 months were 22% (G + P) and 33% (P). No significant differences were found in overall survival, objective response rate, and post-progression PFS between arms. The most frequent adverse events were diarrhea (79% vs. 26%), anemia (46% vs. 51%), nausea (41% vs. 40%), and peripheral neuropathy (36% vs. 47%). Serious adverse events were more common in G + P (39.5% vs. 23.3%). Gastrointestinal perforation was a new safety finding. Despite a high TP53 mutation frequency, HSP90–p53 complexes were detected in only 39.6% of the cases and were also detected stably during treatment. In vitro, no synergistic effects of G + P were observed, and mutant p53 depletion did not sensitize ovarian cancer cells to treatment. Conclusions: Although no major safety findings were observed, G + P did not lead to survival benefit. Our companion diagnostic program confirmed that G + P do not favorably cooperate in killing ovarian cancer cells.

22Works
1Papers
25Collaborators
Ovarian NeoplasmsTumor Suppressor Protein p53Neoplasm GradingEndometrial NeoplasmsGenetic Predisposition to DiseasePrognosis