AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study assessed the effectiveness of the DDR-targeting drug olaparib, both alone and with the ATR inhibitor ceralasertib, in patients with relapsed small cell lung cancer (SCLC) who previously did not respond to standard treatments.
  • - Results showed a low objective response rate for olaparib monotherapy at 6.7%, with better disease control rates noted in the combination therapy group (42.3%) despite both arms showing limited effectiveness.
  • - The findings suggest that while the treatments didn't meet target efficacy goals, the combination therapy showed potential for greater disease stabilization, indicating a need for more research on different combinations and patient selection for optimal outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Based on a high incidence of genomic alteration in the cell cycle and DNA damage and response (DDR)-related pathways in small cell lung cancer (SCLC), the clinical efficacy of the DDR-targeting agent olaparib (PARP inhibitor) as monotherapy and in combination with ceralasertib (ATR inhibitor) in relapsed or refractory SCLC was evaluated.

Methods: As part of a phase 2 biomarker driven umbrella study, patients with SCLC and predefined DDR gene alterations who failed to benefit from prior platinum-based regimens were allocated to the olaparib monotherapy arm and nonbiomarker-selected patients were allocated to the olaparib and ceralasertib combination arm.

Results: In the olaparib monotherapy arm (n = 15), the objective response rate was 6.7% (one partial response), and the disease control rate was 33.3%, including three patients with stable disease. The median progression-free survival was 1.3 months (95% CI, 1.2-NA). In the combination arm (n = 26), the objective response rate and disease control rate were 3.8% and 42.3%, respectively, with one partial response and 10 patients with stable disease. The median progression-free survival was 2.8 months (95% CI, 1.8-5.4). Treatment was generally well tolerated except for one fatal case of neutropenic fever in the combination arm.

Conclusions: Targeting DDR pathways with olaparib as a single agent or in combination with ceralasertib did not meet the predefined efficacy end point. However, disease stabilization was more evident in the combination arm. Further investigation of the combination of olaparib in SCLC should be performed with diverse combinations and patient selection strategies to maximize efficacy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cncr.35059DOI Listing

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