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Spots Global Cancer Trial Database for Continuous vs Intermittent Dabrafenib Plus Trametinib in BRAFV600 Mutant Stage 3 Unresectable or Metastatic Melanoma

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Trial Identification

Brief Title: Continuous vs Intermittent Dabrafenib Plus Trametinib in BRAFV600 Mutant Stage 3 Unresectable or Metastatic Melanoma

Official Title: INTERIM: a Randomised Phase II Feasibility Study of INTERmittent Versus Continuous Dosing or Oral Targeted Combination Therapy in Patients With BRAFV600 Mutant Stage 3 Unresectable or Metastatic Melanoma

Study ID: NCT03352947

Conditions

Melanoma

Study Description

Brief Summary: This feasibility study aims to determine if intermittent dosing is deliverable, based on patient and professional willingness to take part in a randomised trial evaluating less rather than the standard durations of treatment. The trial will evaluate treatment compliance, Progression Free Survival and Quality of Life, to inform whether a subsequent definitive trial is justified and how it should be designed.

Detailed Description: Metastatic melanoma has a very poor prognosis: median overall survival is 8 months untreated and around 2 years even with optimal systemic therapies. A gene called BRAF is abnormal in about half of melanomas and biological agents targeting the BRAF pathway have been shown to extend life. They are now routinely available in NHS clinical practice. Giving BRAF and MEK inhibitor drugs together offers the best anti-cancer treatment for these patients. However, treatment is limited by side-effects (often affecting the skin) and secondary resistance (which means the cancer regrows usually after about a year). Laboratory experiments and case reports suggest intermittent dosing of these chronic orally administered drugs makes BRAF pathway inhibitors work for longer, extending life and reducing side effects. The INTERIM trial aims to test whether less treatment than usual is acceptable to patients and doctors and, potentially, more beneficial. The INTERIM trial also aims to develop better tools to monitor skin side-effects. The target population will be male and female participants aged 18 and over with BRAFV600 mutant stage 3 unresectable or metastatic melanoma.Patients will be provided with information regarding the trial both through conversation with investigators and research nurses and in writing via a patient information sheet. Patients will be given time to ask questions and discuss with family/support structures before deciding to participate. If the patient agrees to take part, they will be asked to provide written consent. Visit schedule for consenting patients: Screening: Consenting patients will enter the screening/baseline phase, which will be completed within 28 days prior to randomisation. This will include assessing the patient against inclusion \& exclusion criteria. Randomisation: If eligible, patients will be randomly assigned to either treatment arms using a web-based central randomisation system. Patients will be randomised on a 1:1 basis to one of 2 arms: Control arm: dabrafenib 150mg twice daily and trametinib 2mg once daily, taken by mouth continuously on a 4 week cycle Experimental arm: dabrafenib 150mg twice daily x 3 weeks and trametinib 2mg once daily x 2 weeks, on a 4 week cycle On treatment: During the first two cycles of treatment patients will attend the hospital every two weeks (on days 1 and 15 of the cycle) where they will have a clinical review. From cycle 3 onwards patients will attend the hospital only on day 1 of the cycle. If patients are on treatment for more than 52 weeks, clinic visits can be every other cycle with telephone follow-up between to ensure patient review is at least every 4 weeks until progression. End of Treatment: At the end of treatment an additional clinical visit will be performed to review the patient. If at the time of treatment cessation patients have not met the criteria for disease progression they will be followed up every 4 weeks. After 52 weeks since randomisation there will be the option of clinic visits every 8 weeks with telephone follow-up in between. Disease progression: Patients will have a clinical visit at the time of protocol-defined disease progression. Follow-up after disease progression: Patients will attend hospital every three months after disease progression for a minimum of 9 months from randomisation. Trial procedures: Clinical review \& physical examinations: Patients will be reviewed by the trial team during the screening period, at every treatment and follow-up visit. This will involve recording any medications they may be taking, and any symptoms and/or side-effects they may have. Patients will also have a physical examination, and assessment of blood pressure as part of this review, and the clinical team will assess the patient's clinical status using ECOG and Karnofsky performance status scales. Baseline skin assessment \& skin toxicity questionnaires: At screening the patient and clinician will be asked to complete a questionnaire about the baseline condition of the patient's skin. If during treatment there are any skin-related adverse events both the patient and clinician will be asked to complete a skin toxicity questionnaire. Compliance assessment: During treatment at each clinical visit the patient will be asked to bring their medication along with their diary card.The clinical team will record how many tablets remain and how many tablets have been taken. The patient will be asked to record in the diary card the date and time when they take their medication. Both of these activities will be used to assess the patient's compliance to the treatment regimen. Pregnancy test: Women of child bearing potential will have a pregnancy test at screening to ensure they are not pregnant and are therefore able to receive the trial drugs. Electrocardiogram (ECG): An ECG test is required before starting the trial. Echocardiogram (ECHO): An ECHO is required prior to starting the trial in patients with a history of cardiac problems, in patients with no cardiac history and a normal ECG it must be performed within two weeks of starting trial drug. ECHOs will subsequently be performed as standard of care, the recommended frequency is during cycle 4 and every 12 weeks thereafter to ensure that patients are tolerating the trial drugs well. Blood samples (routine and research): Patients will be asked to have routine blood tests (FBC, renal, liver, bone profiles, LDH) to ensure that they are fit enough for the trial, and that they are tolerating the drug well. These blood samples will be taken at every clinical visit during treatment and at disease progression. Patients will also be asked to give extra blood for research related to this trial. The samples will be used to measure circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA). An extra blood sample will be taken every 2 weeks for the first two cycles of treatment, every 4 weeks for the next two cycles, then every 8 weeks, and at disease progression. Patients will be asked if they wish to participate in optional pharmacokinetic sampling. This will involve collection of 9 blood samples on both cycle 1 day 1, and cycle 2 day 15 at timepoints after they have taken their tablets. Additionally, 3 blood samples would be taken if their disease progresses. Tumour assessments: Patients will have an initial CT scan of body and head during the screening period. Scans will be repeated between days 8-15 of cycle 2 and then every 8 weeks until the end of treatment. If treatment continues beyond 52 weeks imaging can be reduced to every 12 weeks. If the initial screening head scan is clear, the head scan only requires repeating at every other assessment. Quality of Life questionnaires: Patients will be asked to fill in questionnaires about their quality of life at screening on day 1 of cycle 2, and then every12 weeks until the end of participation in the trial. Tumour Tissue collection: Upon starting treatment patients will be asked to donate previously archived tissue collected for research purposes. If patients undergo surgical resection or biopsy during the course of the trial for progressive disease, a tumour sample will be requested for this research. Patient Experience survey: Patient who do not consent to participate in the trial will be asked to complete a questionnaire to explore their reasons for declining. Additionally, patients who do participate in the trial will be asked to complete patient experience questionnaires after consent and after 9 months participation in the trial. These questionnaires will ask the patients about their experience of participating in the trial and any toxicity they experienced. Patients may continue on allocated treatment as long as they benefit from the treatment and it is tolerable. Patients will be followed for a minimum of 9 months from randomisation to a maximum of 5 years.

Keywords

Eligibility

Minimum Age: 18 Years

Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT

Sex: ALL

Healthy Volunteers: No

Locations

Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, England, United Kingdom

Contact Details

Name: Pippa Corrie, FRCP

Affiliation: Addenbrookes

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Useful links and downloads for this trial

Clinicaltrials.gov

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