Precision Oncology Clinical Trials: A Systematic Review of Phase II Clinical Trials with Biomarker-Driven, Adaptive Designopen accessPrecision Oncology Clinical Trials: A Systematic Review of Phase II Clinical Trials with Biomarker-Driven, Adaptive Design
- Other Titles
- Precision Oncology Clinical Trials: A Systematic Review of Phase II Clinical Trials with Biomarker-Driven, Adaptive Design
- Authors
- 하혜림; 이희연; 김지현; 김도연; 안호정; 배승진; 박혜성; 강진형
- Issue Date
- Oct-2024
- Publisher
- 대한암학회
- Keywords
- Biomarkers; Neoplasms; Precision medicine; Adaptive design; Independent central review committees; Efficacy; Safety; Infrastructure; Anticancer drugs
- Citation
- Cancer Research and Treatment, v.56, no.4, pp 991 - 1013
- Pages
- 23
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
- Journal Title
- Cancer Research and Treatment
- Volume
- 56
- Number
- 4
- Start Page
- 991
- End Page
- 1013
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/26530
- DOI
- 10.4143/crt.2024.128
- ISSN
- 1598-2998
2005-9256
- Abstract
- Novel clinical trial designs are conducted in the precision medicine era. This study aimed to evaluate biomarker-driven, adaptive phase II trials in precision oncology, focusing on infrastructure, efficacy, and safety. We systematically reviewed and analyzed the target studies. EMBASE and PubMed searches from 2015 to 2023 generated 29 eligible trials. Data extraction included infrastructure, biomarker screening methodologies, efficacy, and safety profiles. Government agencies, cancer hospitals, and academic societies with accumulated experiences led investigator-initiated precision oncology clinical trials (IIPOCTs), which later guided sponsor-initiated precision oncology clinical trials (SIPOCTs). Most SIPOCTs were international studies with basket design. IIPOCTs primarily used the central laboratory for biomarker screening, but SIPOCTs used both central and local laboratories. Most of the studies adapted next-generation sequencing and/or immunohistochemistry for biomarker screening. Fifteen studies included an independent central review committee for outcome investigation. Efficacy assessments predominantly featured objective response rate as the primary endpoint, with varying results. Nine eligible studies contributed to the United States Food and Drug Administration’s marketing authorization. Safety monitoring was rigorous, but reporting formats lacked uniformity. Health-related quality of life and patient-reported outcomes were described in some protocols but rarely reported. Our results reveal that precision oncology trials with adaptive design rapidly and efficiently evaluate anticancer drugs’ efficacy and safety, particularly in specified biomarker-driven cohorts. The evolution from IIPOCT to SIPOCT has facilitated fast regulatory approval, providing valuable insights into the precision oncology landscape.
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