AI Article Synopsis

  • Modern cancer therapies are targeting specific aspects of cancer for better effectiveness and tolerability, but many still face issues with side effects and overall tolerability.
  • The traditional maximum tolerated dose (MTD) model may no longer be suitable, prompting a move towards a more holistic approach for determining optimal dosing in early clinical trials.
  • The FDA's Project Optimus and international collaborations through Project Orbis are working on optimizing dose selection and improving patient access to new cancer therapies, emphasizing the need for reform in how early phase oncology trials are conducted.

Article Abstract

Modern cancer therapeutics are increasingly targeted, bringing the promise of new and improved activity, alongside better tolerability. However, while many are indeed resulting in dramatic improvements in disease control and patient survival, short- and long-term tolerability has not always accompanied it. The choice of dose and schedule is often in the upper range of the therapeutic window, driven by the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) model of previous cytotoxic agents. There is increasing recognition that this needs to change, by taking a more holistic approach to determine the optimal dose for desired biological effects and tolerability early in clinical development. In the US, the FDA's Oncology Centre of Excellence is addressing this the Project Optimus initiative: aiming to reform dose optimisation studies so that they can demonstrate the most appropriate dose selection. Early clinical development will need to demonstrate the dose-exposure, -pharmacodynamic, -toxicity and -activity relationships, including randomised evaluations for dose selection. Regulatory agencies outside the US are similarly exploring this. Along with Australia, Brazil, Canada, Israel, Singapore and Switzerland, the UK participates in Project Orbis, a collaborative program with the FDA to accelerate patient access to new cancer medicines through coordinated regulatory review. Close alignment with Project Optimus will be important internationally and will require changes across industry, including for academic units and small biotech. We discuss our perspective on the implications, and opportunities, for early phase oncology trials as a uniquely charity-funded drug development facility, the Centre for Drug Development within the Cancer Research UK charity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10020863PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1144056DOI Listing

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