14 April 2009

Emerging Applications In Clinical Radiation Oncology



Emerging Applications In Clinical Radiation Oncology
by
Ross A. Abrams, M.D.


Topics

* Integration of Emerging Results From Molecular Biology Into Patient Selection and Treatment Strategies
* Integration of Enhanced Technology Into Clinical Practice
* Moving Beyond Photons (X-Rays) to Charged Particles (Protons, Heavy Ions)

Integration of Emerging Results From Molecular Biology

* Combining Radiotherapy With Targeted Therapy
* Using Genomics, Proteomics, Metabolomics to Help Define Prognosis
* Using Genomics, Proteomics, Metabolomics to Help Define Treatment

Cetuximab
Clinical Activity

* Colorectal Cancer
* Head and Neck

Side Effects – Minimal

* Infusion Reactions
* Rash
* Asthenia
* N/V/D


Radiation Synergies

* EGFR Blockade Results in Radiation Sensitization
* EGFR Expression Upregulated by Irradiation

Combining Radiotherapy With

Cetuximab + Radiotherapy
Minimal Increase in Toxicity
Other Target Agents Showing Promise w/ XRT

Integration of Emerging Results From Molecular Biology

* Combining Radiotherapy With Targeted Therapy
* Using Genomics, Proteomics, Metabolomics to Help Define Prognosis
* Using Genomics, Proteomics, Metabolomics to Help Define Treatment

Read more...

Oncology biomarkers for safety and efficacy



Oncology biomarkers for safety and efficacy
by
David Ross, M.D., Ph.D.
Office of Oncology Drug Products
Center for Drug Evaluation and Research
U.S. Food and Drug Administration

* Why biomarkers?
* Biomarkers for safety
* Biomarkers for efficacy
* Scientific and regulatory challenges
* FDA views pharmacogenomics and biomarkers as part of a new paradigm for oncology therapeutics development
* Developing new cancer treatments via biomarkers will require a coordinated public-private approach between academia, industry, government, and other stakeholders

Development issues in oncology – I

* Represents >100 diseases/indications
o Different natural histories
o Different etiologies/molecular biology
* Efficacy assessment is difficult
o Most investigational therapies fail to show efficacy
o Even promising agents may have small treatment effects
* Safety assessment is difficult
o most candidates (even targeted) are toxic
o underlying disease may confound safety assessment
* Investigational nature of discipline
o cancer centers, cooperative groups, NCI
* Multi-disciplinary approaches
o chemotherapy, biologics, surgery, radiation therapy, devices, supportive care, diagnostics

Development issues in oncology – II

* Life-threatening nature of diseases
* Potential for distant recurrences
* Drugs have multiple MOAs; used in combination
* Risk/benefit ratio--different perspective on serious adverse events; highly trained specialists using drugs rather than GP
* Off-label uses may be standard of care
* New technologies/concepts piloted in oncology

Research vs. results
The paradox of drug development

1. Clinical trials provide evidence of efficacy and safety at usual doses in populations
2. Physicians treat individual patients who can vary widely in their response to drug therapy

All patients with same diagnosis


Therapy C
Therapy B
Therapy A
Some respond to treatment
Some don’t
Some develop adverse reactions
Why the differences in response?

Standard therapy

Responders and Patients

Not Predisposed to Toxicity

All patients with same diagnosis

Alternate therapy
non-responders
and toxic responders
Responding to variability

Pharmacogenomics applied to oncology therapeutics development

GCCCACCTC
GCCCGCCTC

Evolution of pharmacogenomics

* Phenotypic variation known for >50 y
o Isoniazid rapid acetylators, G6PD-associated hemolysis
o Application required development of new assay for each phenotype
* Sequencing of entire human genome
* Genotype – drug response correlations
* Analytic biochemistry advances
o Development of bioinformatics
o Multiplex gene analysis platforms
o Application of fluidics and IC manufacturing techniques to gene chip fabrication
* Oncology therapeutic strategies
o Clinically relevant genotypes identified
o Development of validated assay for genotype
o Safety – correlation of clinical risk with genotype
o Efficacy – clinical benefit via genotype targeting

Irinotecan (Camptosar®)

* Irinotecan ~ proven 1st (5-FU and leucovorin) and 2nd line prodrug therapy for metastatic colon/rectal cancer
* Providers/patients face a clinical predicament ~ what is the optimal dose?
o Incidence of grade 3-4 neutropenia is 35%
o Nearly 70% of patients need dose reduction
o Toxicity associated with active drug exposure

Read more...

Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development



Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development
by
Eda T. Bloom, Ph.D.

Chief, Gene Transfer and Immunogenicity Branch
Office of Cellular, Tissue, and Gene Therapies
Division of Cellular and Gene Therapies
Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research
FDA

Outline

* FDA organization
* Products regulated
* Critical path issues in the development of cell based products

OCTGT Regulated Products

* Products with Cancer indications
o Cellular therapies
o Tumor vaccines
o Gene therapies
o Tissue and tissue based products
o Combination products
o Anti-idiotype antibodies
* Products generally not used for cancer
o Xenotransplantation products
o Devices used for cells/tissues

Therapeutic Biological Products Regulated by CDER

* Monoclonal antibodies for in vivo use.
* Proteins intended for therapeutic use
o Includes cytokines (e.g. interferons), growth factors, enzymes (e.g. thrombolytics), and other novel proteins, except for those that are specifically assigned to CBER (e.g., vaccines and blood products).
o Includes therapeutic proteins derived from plants, animals, or microorganisms, and recombinant versions of these products.
* Immunomodulators (non-vaccine and non-allergenic products intended to treat disease by inhibiting or modifying a pre-existing immune response).

FDA Perspectives (CMC)

* Greater product knowledge (mechanism of action, characterization, etc) will aid in developing meaningful assays and/or novel approaches for product characterization and comparability
o Potency and identity testing should provide meaningful information about the product prior to its release
* Control of manufacturing process is key to producing consistent biological products
* A flexible approach and open communication is needed by both regulators and product developers

Potential CMC Issues for
Biological Products

* Some unique concerns for cell/gene therapy products
o Replication competent viruses
o Oncolytic viruses
o Cell/tissue source

* Some unique concerns for protein products
o Post-translational issues
+ Isoforms
+ Glycosylation
o Aggregates

* Examples of cross-cutting concerns
o Immunogenicity
o Animal components
o Formulation, delivery, stability
o Identity, purity, potency, comparability

Read more...
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