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Research Advocacy Network sponsors teleconference Jan 28 to discuss FDA/ ODAC split vote on Avastin
Date posted: 01-17-2008

Join us for a Webinar & Discussion about the ODAC vote on Avastin and Endpoints in Clinical Trials

January 28 2-3pm ET
Register at: https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/827555083
Space is limited.
This event is sponsored solely by Research Advocacy Network.

Many advocates were surprised, even shocked, when on December 5th the Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee (ODAC) voted 5-4 against recommending approval for Avastin (bevacizumab) for use in combination with Taxol (paclitaxel) in first-line metastatic breast cancer. FDA has taken the advisory committee vote and discussion under advisement and will make its decision in February.

What happened and why? After the results of the E2100 trial were presented to a standing-room only audience at ASCO in 2005, many of us assumed that FDA approval for this new indication would be a sure thing, but since then, the use of Avastin in breast cancer has been fraught with controversy surrounding pricing and an initial refusal of the FDA to consider Genentech's application.

At the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium last month, the split vote at the ODAC meeting was certainly a topic of discussion--and some confusion--among the advocates. What had the FDA seen in the data that others did not? What is the truth about the toxic deaths that FDA attributed to Avastin? What were FDA's concerns about missing data and the reliability of scans? What level of evidence does FDA need to validate PFS as a primary endpoint? What other drugs have been approved using PFS as an endpoint? Given that many women may be heavily pre-treated in the adjuvant setting, is there a difference between first line, second line and third line treatment for metastatic breast cancer? To help clarify the issues involved, please join us for a teleconference to learn, discuss and hopefully shed some light on the facts and issues involved.

Panel:
George W. Sledge, Jr., MD, Professor, Dept of Medicine & Pathology, Indiana University, Ballvé-Lantero Professor of Oncology

Richard Gelber, PhD, Prof. Biostatistics, Dana-Farber Cancer Inst, Harvard Medical School Director, Statistical Ctr, International Breast Cancer Study Group (IBCSG)

Bob Erwin, Patient Advocate, Founder & Pres., Marti Nelson Cancer Fdtn.

Background Information for Teleconference and Discussion
The following background information was prepared by Musa Mayer, AdvancedBC.org at the request of Research Advocacy Network. Thanks, Musa, for your help!

Three documents are being made available to you as background before this call:

* Paul Goldberg's write-up of the meeting, in The Cancer Letter (available for this topic at http://files.e2ma.net/2797/assets/docs/cancer_letter.pdf) of December 14, is entitled "Avastin Vote Puts Focus on FDA Criteria in First-Line Metastatic Breast Cancer." This succinctly written article reports on the dynamics of the ODAC meeting, and clarifies the complex regulatory history and background so essential for understanding the issues.

* The FDA Briefing Document details FDA's concerns about the safety and efficacy of Avastin for this indication, and raises questions about the research and the endpoint of progression-free survival (PFS) supporting it. FDA briefing documents: http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/ac/07/briefing/2007-4332b1-01-FDA.pdf

"The key issue of this application is whether the significant improvement in PFS, in the absence of an improvement in overall survival, is a measure of direct clinical benefit that supports regular approval of bevacizumab plus paclitaxel for 1st-line treatment of patients with metastatic breast cancer."

"The improvement of PFS, in the absence of an improvement in overall survival in breast cancer patients, must be weighted against the increased toxicity, including deaths associated with the administration of bevacizumab. The absence of activity of bevacizumab in the second and third line setting for breast cancer as evident in the results of the AVF2119g study must be taken into consideration."

* The Genentech Briefing Document includes the company (sponsor) presentation of the evidence for safety and efficacy from E2100 and other clinical trials of Avastin in breast cancer. Genentech briefing documents: http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/ac/07/briefing/2007-4332b1-03-Genentech.pdf

"The addition of bevacizumab to first-line paclitaxel resulted in a statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvement in the primary endpoint, progression-free survival (PFS) based on an independent review of radiographs (hazard ratio [HR] of 0.483; p < 0.0001), with a 5.5-month increase in median PFS (from 5.8 to 11.3 months)."

"The safety profile for bevacizumab in Study E2100 was consistent with the profile established in previous trials in this and other indications. Thus, the risk-benefit profile was highly favorable in the MBC setting."

"Regulatory precedence for PFS as an endpoint for approval in breast cancer has been established, as PFS has served as the primary endpoint for the approval of most of the chemotherapy agents and hormonal agents currently and recently approved for use in MBC."

As Paul Goldberg's article reflects, for this meeting FDA posed two issues for consideration that were discussed at length by ODAC members:

1. In the E2100 study, PFS is clearly not a surrogate endpoint for survival in first-line breast cancer. Can PFS be considered a measure of direct clinical benefit in initial treatment of metastatic breast cancer?

2. Is an estimated 5.5 month improvement in median PFS, with no improvement in survival, at a cost of increased toxicity and death, sufficient to establish a net clinical benefit in support of approval of bevacizumab for the initial treatment of patients with metastatic breast cancer?

The split vote at ODAC indicates that there is real disagreement on these issues. In holding this teleconference, we aren't expecting to resolve these disagreements, of course, but simply to educate advocates more fully on the issues and their implications for drug development.

Research Advocacy Network is a tax exempt 501 c 3 organization. This event is sponsored solely by Research Advocacy Network.

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