Maintenance Therapy With Tumor-Treating Fields Plus Temozolomide vs Temozolomide Alone for Glioblastoma: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-15-2015
Journal Title
JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association
MeSH Headings
Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antineoplastic Agents, Alkylating, Brain Neoplasms, Canada, Carmustine, Chemoradiotherapy, Combined Modality Therapy, Dacarbazine, Disease Progression, Disease-Free Survival, Early Termination of Clinical Trials, Electric Stimulation Therapy, Europe, Female, Glioblastoma, Humans, Israel, Maintenance Chemotherapy, Male, Middle Aged, Republic of Korea, Temozolomide, United States, Young Adult
Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Glioblastoma is the most devastating primary malignancy of the central nervous system in adults. Most patients die within 1 to 2 years of diagnosis. Tumor-treating fields (TTFields) are a locoregionally delivered antimitotic treatment that interferes with cell division and organelle assembly.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of TTFields used in combination with temozolomide maintenance treatment after chemoradiation therapy for patients with glioblastoma.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: After completion of chemoradiotherapy, patients with glioblastoma were randomized (2:1) to receive maintenance treatment with either TTFields plus temozolomide (n = 466) or temozolomide alone (n = 229) (median time from diagnosis to randomization, 3.8 months in both groups). The study enrolled 695 of the planned 700 patients between July 2009 and November 2014 at 83 centers in the United States, Canada, Europe, Israel, and South Korea. The trial was terminated based on the results of this planned interim analysis.
INTERVENTIONS: Treatment with TTFields was delivered continuously (>18 hours/day) via 4 transducer arrays placed on the shaved scalp and connected to a portable medical device. Temozolomide (150-200 mg/m2/d) was given for 5 days of each 28-day cycle.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary end point was progression-free survival in the intent-to-treat population (significance threshold of .01) with overall survival in the per-protocol population (n = 280) as a powered secondary end point (significance threshold of .006). This prespecified interim analysis was to be conducted on the first 315 patients after at least 18 months of follow-up.
RESULTS: The interim analysis included 210 patients randomized to TTFields plus temozolomide and 105 randomized to temozolomide alone, and was conducted at a median follow-up of 38 months (range, 18-60 months). Median progression-free survival in the intent-to-treat population was 7.1 months (95% CI, 5.9-8.2 months) in the TTFields plus temozolomide group and 4.0 months (95% CI, 3.3-5.2 months) in the temozolomide alone group (hazard ratio [HR], 0.62 [98.7% CI, 0.43-0.89]; P = .001). Median overall survival in the per-protocol population was 20.5 months (95% CI, 16.7-25.0 months) in the TTFields plus temozolomide group (n = 196) and 15.6 months (95% CI, 13.3-19.1 months) in the temozolomide alone group (n = 84) (HR, 0.64 [99.4% CI, 0.42-0.98]; P = .004).
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this interim analysis of 315 patients with glioblastoma who had completed standard chemoradiation therapy, adding TTFields to maintenance temozolomide chemotherapy significantly prolonged progression-free and overall survival.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00916409.
ISSN
1538-3598
First Page
2535
Last Page
2543
Recommended Citation
Stupp, Roger; Taillibert, Sophie; Kanner, Andrew A; Kesari, Santosh; Steinberg, David M; Toms, Steven A; Taylor, Lynne P; Lieberman, Frank; Silvani, Antonio; Fink, Karen L; Barnett, Gene H; Zhu, Jay-Jiguang; Henson, John W; Engelhard, Herbert H; Chen, Thomas C; Tran, David D; Sroubek, Jan; Tran, Nam D; Hottinger, Andreas F; Landolfi, Joseph; Desai, Rajiv; Caroli, Manuela; Kew, Yvonne; Honnorat, Jerome; Idbaih, Ahmed; Kirson, Eilon D; Weinberg, Uri; Palti, Yoram; Hegi, Monika E; and Ram, Zvi, "Maintenance Therapy With Tumor-Treating Fields Plus Temozolomide vs Temozolomide Alone for Glioblastoma: A Randomized Clinical Trial." (2015). MaineHealth Maine Medical Center. 1642.
https://knowledgeconnection.mainehealth.org/mmc/1642