Investigator

Carey Anders

Assistant Director of Clinical Research · Duke University, Duke Cancer Institute

CACarey Anders
Papers(1)
Phase II DORA Study o…
Collaborators(10)
Ezequiel RenzulliJoe YeongKelly MundyLilin SheRebecca DentRobert BigelowSarah SammonsSung-Bae KimTiffany A. TrainaTira J. Tan
Institutions(7)
Duke Cancer InstituteIllinois Environmenta…Singapore General Hos…Clinical Research Ins…National Cancer Centr…University Of UlsanMemorial Sloan Ketter…

Papers

Phase II DORA Study of Olaparib with or without Durvalumab as a Chemotherapy-Free Maintenance Strategy in Platinum-Pretreated Advanced Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

Abstract Purpose: We explored the efficacy of PARP inhibition with or without programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) blockade as chemotherapy-free maintenance therapy for advanced triple-negative breast cancer (aTNBC) sensitive to platinum-based chemotherapy. Patients and Methods: In the phase II non-comparative DORA trial (NCT03167619), patients with ongoing stable disease (SD) or complete/partial response (CR/PR) to first- or second-line platinum-based chemotherapy for TNBC (≤10% estrogen/progesterone receptor expression) were randomized 1:1 to receive olaparib 300 mg twice daily with or without durvalumab 1,500 mg on day 1 every 4 weeks. The primary objective was to compare progression-free survival (PFS) versus a historical control of continued platinum-based therapy. Results: 45 patients were randomized (23 to olaparib alone, 22 to the combination; 3 with estrogen/progesterone receptor expression 1%–10%). At 9.8 months’ median follow-up, median PFS from randomization was 4.0 [95% confidence interval (CI), 2.6–6.1] months with olaparib and 6.1 (95% CI, 3.7–10.1) months with the combination, both significantly longer than the historical control (P = 0.0023 and P < 0.0001, respectively). Clinical benefit rates (SD ≥24 weeks or CR/PR) were 44% (95% CI, 23%–66%) and 36% (95% CI, 17%–59%) in the monotherapy and combination arms, respectively. Sustained clinical benefit was seen irrespective of germline BRCA mutation or PD-L1 status, but tended to be associated with CR/PR to prior platinum, particularly in the olaparib-alone arm. No new safety signals were reported. Conclusions: PFS was longer than expected with both regimens. A patient subset with wild-type BRCA platinum-sensitive aTNBC had durable disease control with chemotherapy-free maintenance.

208Works
1Papers
11Collaborators

Positions

2025–

Assistant Director of Clinical Research

Duke University · Duke Cancer Institute

2020–

Professor of Medicine

Duke University · Medicine

2019–

Instructor, Temporary

Duke University · Medicine

2014–

Associate Professor with Tenure

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · Internal Medicine

2008–

Assistant Professor

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · Internal Medicine

2008–

Visiting Assistant Professor

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · Internal Medicine

2005–

Fellow

Duke University · Internal Medicine

2002–

Resident

Duke University · Internal Medicine

Education

2002

MD

Brody School of Medicine

1997

Post-bacc

University of Pennsylvania

1996

BAs: Psychology, French

Vanderbilt University

1992

HS Diploma

Walter Williams High School

Country

US