Avastin Clinical trial

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ekenny315
ekenny315 Member Posts: 68
Avastin Clinical trial

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  • ekenny315
    ekenny315 Member Posts: 68
    edited June 2008

    I'm sighning on for this clinical trial tomorrow, anyone else doing so or know anyone who has? Also, do i HAVE to sign my health care proxy??

    By the way i am feeling much better emotionally, thank you for you encouragement. We (my husband and myself) are falling in love with all of you. You are all so wonderful!

  • sftfemme65
    sftfemme65 Member Posts: 790
    edited June 2008

    Hi Erika,

    under Help me get through treatment, topic clinical trial e5103....thats about an Avastin trial.  It is a blind trial, I am in it and was receiving the drug through my 4 DD A/C treatments and 12 weekly taxol treatments and now that I'm done with those I go on for 10 more treatments, every 3 weeks of just Avastin.  Many doctors have great hope that Avastin is really going to help us, so find comfort in that I know I do. 

    When do you start treatment and what kind of treatment are you going to be doing?

    Teresa

  • sftfemme65
    sftfemme65 Member Posts: 790
    edited June 2008

    Hi Erika,

    under Help me get through treatment, topic clinical trial e5103....thats about an Avastin trial.  It is a blind trial, I am in it and was receiving the drug through my 4 DD A/C treatments and 12 weekly taxol treatments and now that I'm done with those I go on for 10 more treatments, every 3 weeks of just Avastin.  Many doctors have great hope that Avastin is really going to help us, so find comfort in that I know I do. 

    When do you start treatment and what kind of treatment are you going to be doing?

    Teresa

  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited June 2008

    I am on Avastin and Taxol with Zometa added in.  I am not in a trial, so I can't help with that aspect, but I too have great hope for the Avastin.  Below is a press release from the company that makes Avasting from a few days ago,.  The results look great.  Their stock went up 3 bucks a share today :)

    Deb C 

    Saturday, May 31, 2008

    Second Phase III Study of Avastin Plus Chemotherapy Shows Improved Progression-
    Free Survival in Women With Advanced HER2-Negative Breast Cancer

    -- Positive AVADO Results Support Efficacy and Safety of Avastin in First-
    Line Metastatic Breast Cancer --

    Chicago -- May 31, 2008 -- Genentech, Inc. (NYSE: DNA) today announced
    that Avastin® (bevacizumab), in combination with docetaxel chemotherapy,
    significantly increased the time women with metastatic breast cancer
    receiving first-line therapy lived without their disease advancing, as
    defined by the primary endpoint of progression-free survival (PFS). In
    this Roche-sponsored, placebo-controlled Phase III trial (AVADO), two
    dose levels of Avastin in combination with docetaxel chemotherapy showed
    a statistically significant improvement in PFS compared to docetaxel
    chemotherapy alone, according to an investigator-assessed analysis. No
    new safety signals for Avastin were observed in the study. The results
    were featured today during a press briefing at the 44th Annual Meeting
    of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) and will be
    presented tomorrow by David Miles, M.D., medical oncologist, Mount
    Vernon Hospital, United Kingdom (Abstract # LBA1011 - June 1, 2008 at
    8:30 a.m. CDT in E Hall D1).

    "These results build upon previous data and expand our understanding of
    Avastin's efficacy and safety when combined with another commonly used
    taxane chemotherapy," said Dr. David Miles, principal investigator of
    the study. "Importantly, this study supports that Avastin can be used
    with taxane-based chemotherapy to provide a meaningful benefit for
    patients with advanced HER2-negative breast cancer."

    Genentech is required to submit to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
    (FDA) by mid-2009 the results of AVADO and RIBBON I, a third Phase III
    study in first-line metastatic breast cancer. Results for the RIBBON I
    study are expected later this year.

    The pre-specified analysis of AVADO for U.S. regulatory purposes showed
    that Avastin combined with chemotherapy improved PFS by up to 64 percent
    (hazard ratio of 0.61; p<0.0001) in the 15 mg/kg treatment arm and by up
    to 45 percent (hazard ratio of 0.69; p=0.0035) in the 7.5 mg/kg
    treatment arm, compared to chemotherapy alone. Overall response rate, a
    secondary endpoint, was also positive and supported the PFS benefit
    observed in this study. After one year, 83 percent and 78 percent of
    patients were alive in the 15 mg/kg and 7.5 mg/kg Avastin treatment
    arms, compared to 73 percent of patients receiving chemotherapy alone.

    "The totality of the AVADO results, including positive primary and
    secondary endpoints and reassurances of safety, support the benefit of
    Avastin in extending the time women lived without their disease
    progressing when combined with chemotherapy as a first-line treatment,"
    said Susan Desmond-Hellmann, M.D., M.P.H., president, Product
    Development. "We are committed to fully evaluating Avastin's efficacy
    and safety in metastatic breast cancer and anticipate the results of a
    third Phase III trial later this year."

    About AVADO AVADO was an international, multicenter, randomized, double-
    blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial that enrolled 736 patients with
    locally recurrent or metastatic HER2-negative breast cancer who had not
    received chemotherapy for their metastatic disease. Patients were
    randomized to one of two doses of Avastin (15 mg/kg or 7.5 mg/kg) or
    placebo given every three weeks in combination with docetaxel
    chemotherapy for a maximum of nine cycles. Patients discontinuing
    docetaxel for toxicity or after nine cycles were to continue on Avastin
    only or placebo until disease progression. The AVADO study was not
    designed to compare the two dose levels of Avastin.

    In the 15 mg/kg and 7.5 mg/kg Avastin treatment arms, the 64 percent and
    45 percent improvements in PFS observed can also be referred to as 39
    percent and 31 percent reductions in the risk of cancer progression or
    death. Median PFS was 8.8 months, 8.7 months and 8.0 months in the 15
    mg/kg and 7.5 mg/kg Avastin plus chemotherapy arms and the chemotherapy
    alone arm, respectively. Overall response rates were 63 percent
    (p=0.0001) and 55 percent (p=0.0295) in the 15 mg/kg and 7.5 mg/kg
    Avastin plus chemotherapy arms, compared to 44 percent in the
    chemotherapy alone arm.

    The study protocol specified analyses for overall survival at the time
    of primary endpoint analysis and 24 months after the last patient was
    enrolled. The final analysis for overall survival is expected in 2009.
    Hazard ratios for the preliminary analysis of overall survival are 0.68
    and 0.92 for the 15 mg/kg and 7.5 mg/kg Avastin arms, respectively.
    These initial results for overall survival are not statistically
    significant and are based on early information.

    Efficacy Results 15 mg/kg Avastin + docetaxel1 7.5 mg/kg Avastin +
    docetaxel1 Placebo + docetaxel1 Progression-Free Survival (PFS)2

         Overall PFS Improvement Risk Reduction Hazard Ratio p-value

    64% 39% .61 p<0.0001

    45% 31% .69 p=0.0035

    N/A Median PFS (months) 8.8 8.7 8.0 Overall Response Rate (%)3

    p-value 63

    p=0.0001 55

    p=0.0295 44

    1-Year Survival Rate (%) 83 78 73 Overall Survival (not mature)

    Hazard Ratio

    .68

    .92

    O/A

    1 Each Avastin + docetaxel arm was studied against placebo + docetaxel.
    The study was not designed to compare the two Avastin arms. 2 Pre-
    specified primary endpoint analysis for U.S. regulatory purposes. 3
    Among patients with measurable disease at baseline.

    The AVADO study provided a comprehensive safety assessment of the
    Avastin and docetaxel combination by using a placebo control arm and
    collecting Grade 1 to 5 adverse events in all arms of the study. The
    most common severe adverse events were generally consistent with
    those observed in a previous Phase III study of Avastin in metastatic
    breast cancer.

    Safety Results
    % (n) 15 mg/kg Avastin
    + docetaxel 7.5 mg/kg Avastin
    + docetaxel Placebo
    + docetaxel Grade 3-5 Adverse Events (AEs) 74% (183/247) 75% (187/250)
      67% (156/233) &#8805;Grade 3 Hypertension 3.2% (8/247) 0.4% (1/250)
      1.3% (3/233) &#8805;Grade 3 Febrile neutropenia 16.6% (41/247) 15.2%
      (38/250) 12.0% (28/233) &#8805;Grade 3 Skin exfoliation 1.2% (3/247)
      2.4% (6/250) 0% (0/233) &#8805;Grade 3 Mucosal inflammation 4.9%
      (12/247) 4.0% (10/250) 0.4% (1/233) Grade 5 AEs (deaths during blinded
      study treatment not due to breast cancer) 1.6% (4/247) 1.6% (4/250)
      2.6% (6/233)

    About Breast Cancer Breast cancer is the second most common form of
    cancer and second leading cause of cancer deaths among American
    women. According to the American Cancer Society, an estimated 182,000
    women will be diagnosed with breast cancer and approximately 40,000
    will die from the disease in the U.S. in 2008. Genentech estimates
    that 75 percent of women with newly diagnosed metastatic breast
    cancer are HER2-negative.

    About Avastin Avastin is a therapeutic antibody designed to specifically
    inhibit vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a protein that plays
    an important role in angiogenesis and the maintenance of existing blood
    vessels throughout the lifecycle of a tumor. By inhibiting VEGF, Avastin
    is designed to interfere with the blood supply to a tumor, which is
    thought to be critical to a tumor's ability to grow and spread in the
    body (metastasize).

    Avastin is indicated for the first- and second-line treatment of
    metastatic colorectal cancer in combination with intravenous 5-FU-based
    chemotherapy, and for the first-line treatment of unresectable, locally
    advanced, recurrent or metastatic non-squamous, non-small cell lung
    cancer (NSCLC) in combination with carboplatin and paclitaxel. For more
    information on angiogenesis, visit http://www.gene.com/. For full
    Prescribing Information and Boxed Warnings on Avastin, visit
    http://www.avastin.com/.

    Avastin Safety Avastin has a well-characterized safety profile in its
    approved indications. The most serious adverse events associated with
    Avastin across all trials were gastrointestinal perforation, wound
    healing complications, hemorrhage, non-GI fistula formation, arterial
    thromboembolic events, hypertensive crisis, reversible posterior
    leukoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLS), neutropenia and infection,
    nephrotic syndrome and congestive heart failure.

    The most common severe adverse reactions (NCI-CTC Grade 3-5) across
    clinical trials in metastatic colorectal cancer, NSCLC, and metastatic
    breast cancer that occurred at a higher incidence (greater than or equal
    to 2 percent higher rate vs. controls) were hypertension, proteinuria
    and headache.

    About Genentech Founded more than 30 years ago, Genentech is a leading
    biotechnology company that discovers, develops, manufactures and
    commercializes medicines for patients with significant unmet medical
    needs. The company has headquarters in South San Francisco, California
    and is listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol DNA. For
    additional information about the company, please visit
    http://www.gene.com/.

    ###
    This press release contains forward-looking statements regarding the
    safety and efficacy of Avastin, the benefit of Avastin for patients, and
    the timing of data availability. Such statements are predictions and
    involve risks and uncertainties such that actual results may differ
    materially. Actual results may be affected by a number of factors
    including, but not limited to, unexpected safety, efficacy or
    manufacturing issues, difficulty enrolling patients in clinical trials,
    the need for additional data, data analysis or clinical studies, BLA
    preparation, FDA actions or delays, failure to maintain FDA approval,
    competition, pricing, reimbursement, the ability to supply product,
    product withdrawals and new product approvals and launches, and
    intellectual property or contract rights. Please also refer to the risk
    factors described in Genentech's periodic reports filed with the
    Securities and Exchange Commission. Genentech disclaims, and does not
    undertake, any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking
    statement in this press release.

     © Genentech, Inc.

  • CalGal
    CalGal Member Posts: 469
    edited June 2008

    Hi Erika -

    Is the Avastin trial you'll start the one AlaskaDeb noted above?

    I'm also on Avastin, with Abraxane.   Today was supposed to be the A-A combo (weeks 1 & 3), but my wbc was too low, so I only got the Avastin.  The Abraxane portion is on weeks 1, 2 & 3 (wk 4 off).  So, by not getting it today, I'll skip an extra week.

    For me, this is a very do-able combo!  (Granted, it's early and effects are cumulative, but so far so good).

    Glad you're feeling better.

    CalGal 

  • sftfemme65
    sftfemme65 Member Posts: 790
    edited June 2008

    Deb,

    Thanks for posting that...of course I couldn't make heads or tails of it.  I have no idea what it says about my clinical trial.  I am doing a phase III trial.  I don't have mets.  I had positive nodes which was why I qualified or you had to be high risk for reoccurrance and trip neg qualified. 

    Teresa

  • brena
    brena Member Posts: 458
    edited June 2008

    Deb,

    Thanks for the information on when to expect some real data from Genentech. I believe the data does not represent the trial Teresa and me are participating (E5103.). Regardless of which trial, Avastin is the next hope for several types different types of tumors as mentioned above.

    Erika,

    Identify the trial number you are participating, if it is E5103 as Teresa mentioned we have a thread you should check out. If not start a new thread identifying the trial number and you may find others who are participating.

    Very glad to see you participate, you definitely will make a difference and be part of making history!! May you have a smooth journey, if not we are here to help.

    brena 

  • EyesOTex
    EyesOTex Member Posts: 194
    edited June 2008

    Deb,

    I know if I dug back far enough I could probably find the answer to this, but what was your first chemo?  I'm wondering how well the Avastin does without the Taxol/taxotere, since my first chemo was TAC x 6/every three weeks.  I don't know if I'd get taxotere again.

    Right now I'm on Cisplatin/Gemzar.  Was supposed to be 2 wks on 1 wk off x 4 but my blood counts have messed that up so now hoping to go to every other week.  I was almost half way through...  The onc says after that I'll hav a month off and then go to Xeloda?

    Anyway, sorry to hijack the thread, but I was just wondering about your first tx history.

    Thanks

    Eyes

  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited June 2008

    Hey Eyes-

    I did 6 DD A/C then 12 weekly Taxol.  I don't remember exactly how long you need to have between times you are on a taxaine drug.

    I am going to be switching from regular Taxol to Abraxane starting next Monday.  I am having a lot of side effects fromt he premeds from the Taxol.  The Abraxane doesn't need the premeds, plus it takes a half an hour to infuse instead of 4 hours for my Taxol.  It also has a little better numbers associated with it.  Abraxan e and Taxol are the same drug, just delivered in a different solution and a different way.

    I know several different people that are on Avastin with different chemos.  I know that some insurance can be snippy about paying for it with other combos because it is not "proven" yet, but I know some folks are doing it.

    Good Luck

    Deb C

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