Investigator

Nirashaa T. Bound

PhD candidate · Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Cancer Biology and Stem Cells

NTBNirashaa T. Bound
Papers(1)
Olaparib, durvalumab,…
Collaborators(10)
Sally Baron-HaySandy SimonTony PapenfussU. G. Imalki U. Kariy…Cassandra J. Vandenbe…Chee Khoon LeeClaire DaviesClare L. ScottEmily CassarHina Amer
Institutions(3)
Unknown InstitutionWalter and Eliza Hall…The University of Syd…

Papers

Olaparib, durvalumab, and cyclophosphamide, and a prognostic blood signature in platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer: the randomized phase 2 SOLACE2 trial

Abstract SOLACE2 (ACTRN12618000686202) investigates whether 12-weeks of olaparib, or cyclophosphamide-olaparib priming, improves subsequent durvalumab-olaparib progression-free survival (PFS), and is superior to olaparib monotherapy without any priming, in platinum-sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer (n = 114). We also evaluate the utility of CUP-CC assay, an immune signature of C-C chemokine receptor type 4 up-regulation, chemokines, and cytokines. Priming with olaparib, or cyclophosphamide-olaparib, followed by durvalumab-olaparib, are both associated with longer PFS compared to olaparib monotherapy, but do not reach the pre-specified primary endpoint of 36-week trial threshold (PFS36). PFS36 rates are 47.4% (95% CI, 31.0-62.1; olaparib priming then olaparib-durvalumab), 48.7% (32.5-63.2; olaparib-cyclophosphamide then olaparib-durvalumab) and 35.1% (20.4-50.3; olaparib monotherapy). PFS is significantly longer for the homologous recombination deficient (N = 71) as compared to the proficient (HRP) (N = 29) subgroups (Hazard Ratio (HR) 0.55, 0.35-0.87). CUP-CC+ subgroup (N = 58) has a significantly longer PFS (HR 0.31, 0.19-0.49) than CUP-CC- (N = 46). Future studies should investigate whether CUP-CC has the potential to personalize poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor therapies for patients who are BRCA wild-type, including HRP patients.

1Works
1Papers
17Collaborators
Ovarian NeoplasmsPrognosis

Positions

2020–

PhD candidate

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research · Cancer Biology and Stem Cells