Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY
Gopa Iyer , Karla V. Ballman , Pamela J. Atherton , Katie Murray , Young Kwok , Preston D. Steen , Shiva Baghaie , Jonathan E. Rosenberg , Michael J. Morris
Background: While a standard approach to muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) management involves neoadjuvant cisplatin-based chemotherapy (NAC) followed by radical cystectomy (RC), up to 50% of pts recur with metastatic disease. Moreover, removal of the bladder has a significant impact on pts’ quality of life. Pathologic downstaging to non-muscle-invasive disease (<pT2) or complete response (pT0) at RC is associated with long-term survival benefit. Somatic DDR gene alterations were shown to be enriched in pts who were pT0 at RC following NAC in multiple retrospective analyses. We hypothesize that MIBC pts with somatic loss-of-function alterations within specific DDR genes and clinical responses to NAC can be uniquely managed with a bladder-sparing approach consisting of close cystoscopic and radiographic surveillance, avoiding the toxicities of definitive local therapy. Methods: A031701 is a multicenter phase II trial that will enroll 271 pts with T2-T4aN0/xM0 MIBC diagnosed within 60 days prior to enrollment. Multifocal MIBC, tumors >5 cm by cystoscopic assessment, and Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG)-refractory disease (beyond standard induction and maintenance) are not allowed. Intravesical chemotherapy is allowed. Pts must be eligible for cisplatin chemotherapy. Eligible pts will receive either standard dose or dose dense gemcitabine and cisplatin chemotherapy (investigator’s choice) with simultaneous genetic sequencing of pre-treatment transurethral resection specimens. Pts whose tumors contain deleterious alterations in any 1 of 9 pre-selected DDR genes (ERCC2, ERCC5, BRCA1, BRCA2, RECQL4, RAD51C, ATM, ATR, and FANCC) and who exhibit <T1 response on clinical restaging are eligible for organ-sparing management. Pts without deleterious DDR gene alterations or with >T1 disease after NAC will undergo RC or chemoradiation therapy (investigator/patient choice). The primary endpoint is 3-year event-free survival in DDR-altered pts who undergo bladder sparing, defined as the proportion of pts without BCG-unresponsive non-muscle invasive recurrences, any >T2 recurrences, or any metastatic recurrences. Secondary endpoints include clinical response rate (<cT1) in patients with deleterious DDR gene alterations following NAC, bladder-intact survival, overall survival, pT0 rate in DDR-altered pts who elect to undergo RC, pT0 rate in pts without DDR gene alterations, 3-year RC rate in pts with DDR gene alterations, and proportion of pts undergoing intravesical management for in-bladder recurrences. The study opened for enrollment in September 2018. Support: U10CA180821, U10CA180882. Clinical trial information: NCT03609216.
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