Vandetanib: in medullary thyroid cancer.
Author(s): Frampton JE.
Affiliation(s): Adis, Auckland, New Zealand. demail@springer.com
Publication date & source: 2012, Drugs. , 72(10):1423-36
Vandetanib, an orally active, small-molecule, multitargeted tyrosine kinase
inhibitor, demonstrates potent inhibitory activity against vascular endothelial
growth factor receptor (VEGFR)-2 and -3, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)
and the rearranged during transfection (RET) tyrosine kinase receptor. The large
(n=331), randomized, double-blind, multinational ZETA trial compared vandetanib
at a dosage of 300 mg once daily with placebo in patients with unresectable,
locally advanced or metastatic, hereditary or sporadic, medullary thyroid cancer.
During a median follow-up period of 2 years, vandetanib demonstrated
statistically significant clinical benefits over placebo with respect to the
primary endpoint, namely progression-free survival (PFS), and a range of
secondary endpoints, which included objective response rate, disease control
rate, time to worsening of pain and calcitonin biochemical response rate. The PFS
benefit with vandetanib was mostly consistent across patient subgroups based on
baseline characteristics and disease status. Although the correlation between RET
mutation status and clinical outcome could not be clearly evaluated in this
trial, it is notable that, among patients with sporadic disease, vandetanib not
only demonstrated a PFS benefit in the subgroup confirmed as having a RET
mutation, but also in the subgroup for whom the RET mutation status was unknown.
Vandetanib was generally well tolerated in the ZETA trial; the majority of
adverse events were manageable according to standard clinical practice alone or
in combination with vandetanib dose reductions. The adverse event of most concern
is corrected QT interval prolongation, particularly in view of the long terminal
elimination half-life of the drug.
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