Anti-tumour effects of lanreotide for pancreatic and intestinal neuroendocrine tumours: the CLARINET open-label extension study
- Martyn E Caplin1⇑,
- Marianne Pavel2,
- Jarosław B Ćwikła3,
- Alexandria T Phan4,
- Markus Raderer5,
- Eva Sedláčková6,
- Guillaume Cadiot7,
- Edward M Wolin8,
- Jaume Capdevila9,
- Lucy Wall10,
- Guido Rindi11,
- Alison Langley12,
- Séverine Martinez12,
- Edda Gomez-Panzani13,†,
- Philippe Ruszniewski14,15 and
- on behalf of the CLARINET Investigators
- 1Royal Free Hospital, London, UK
2Charité University Medicine Berlin, Berlin, Germany
3University of Warmia and Mazury, Olsztyn, Poland
4University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, USA
5University Hospital, Vienna, Austria
6Department of Oncology of the First Faculty of Medicine and General Teaching Hospital, Prague, Czech Republic
7Robert‐Debré Hospital, Reims, France
8Markey Cancer Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA
9Vall d'Hebron University Hospital, Barcelona, Spain
10Western General Hospital, Edinburgh, UK
11Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Rome, Italy
12Ipsen, Les Ulis, France
13Ipsen, Basking Ridge, New Jersey, USA
14Beaujon Hospital, Clichy, France
15Paris Diderot University, Paris, France
- Correspondence should be addressed to M E Caplin; Email: m.caplin{at}ucl.ac.uk
Abstract
In the CLARINET study, lanreotide Autogel (depot in USA) significantly prolonged progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with metastatic pancreatic/intestinal neuroendocrine tumours (NETs). We report long-term safety and additional efficacy data from the open-label extension (OLE). Patients with metastatic grade 1/2 (Ki-67 ≤10%) non-functioning NET and documented baseline tumour-progression status received lanreotide Autogel 120 mg (n=101) or placebo (n=103) for 96 weeks or until death/progressive disease (PD) in CLARINET study. Patients with stable disease (SD) at core study end (lanreotide/placebo) or PD (placebo only) continued or switched to lanreotide in the OLE. In total, 88 patients (previously: lanreotide, n=41; placebo, n=47) participated: 38% had pancreatic, 39% midgut and 23% other/unknown primary tumours. Patients continuing lanreotide reported fewer adverse events (AEs) (all and treatment-related) during OLE than core study. Placebo-to-lanreotide switch patients reported similar AE rates in OLE and core studies, except more diarrhoea was considered treatment-related in OLE (overall diarrhoea unchanged). Median lanreotide PFS (core study randomisation to PD in core/OLE; n=101) was 32.8 months (95% CI: 30.9, 68.0). A sensitivity analysis, addressing potential selection bias by assuming that patients with SD on lanreotide in the core study and not entering the OLE (n=13) had PD 24 weeks after last core assessment, found median PFS remaining consistent: 30.8 months (95% CI: 30.0, 31.3). Median time to further PD after placebo-to-lanreotide switch (n=32) was 14.0 months (10.1; not reached). This OLE study suggests long-term treatment with lanreotide Autogel 120 mg maintained favourable safety/tolerability. CLARINET OLE data also provide new evidence of lanreotide anti-tumour benefits in indolent and progressive pancreatic/intestinal NETs.
- Revision received 23 December 2015
- Accepted 6 January 2016
- Made available online as an Accepted Preprint 7 January 2016
- © 2016 The authors
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License