Rapid Readouts: Extended Follow-up From the Phase 3 ARAMIS trial

Neal Shore, MD, presents data on the tolerability of and responses to darolutamide (DARO) as seen in the extended follow-up of the phase 3 ARAMIS trial of DARO treatment in men with high-risk, nonmetastatic, castration-resistant prostate cancer. The results were reported at the 2021 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting.

Neal Shore, MD, discusses data from the following presentation:

  • DARO tolerability and treatment response in the extended follow-up of the phase 3 ARAMIS trial (Shore, ASCO 2021, abstract 5079)
    • The study’s objective is to examine the tolerability and treatment response data of DARO treatment in men with high-risk, nonmetastatic, castration-resistant prostate cancer from the extended follow-up of the phase 3 ARAMIS trial (NCT02200614).
    • Phase 3 trial extended follow-up:
      • Comparator arm: DARO (600 mg) 2x daily
      • Control arm: placebo (2 matching tablets) 2x daily
        • After primary analysis for metastasis-free survival, patients could continue onto an open-label trial with DARO treatment
      • Extended follow-up end points examined dose tolerability and treatment response by pharmacodynamic modeling and landmark sensitivity analysis
    • Conclusions: Treatment response
    • DARO is a structurally distinct androgen receptor inhibitor that demonstrated benefits in:
      • Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) response. Occurred in 84.0% and 84.5% of patients treated with DARO in the double-blind and double-blind-plus-open-label treatment periods, respectively, vs 7.9% of patients treated with placebo
        • A PSA response was noted in 31.6% of patients who crossed over from placebo to DARO treatment in the open-label treatment period.
      • Survival. 95% of patients treated with DARO in the initial treatment period were alive after 2 years.
        • Pharmacodynamic modeling demonstrated a positive association between a longer overall survival (OS) and maximum PSA decline in patients treated with DARO.
        • A landmark sensitivity analysis at week 16 demonstrated a further positive association between maximum PSA decline at week 16 and subsequent OS.
    • Conclusions: Safety and tolerability
    • DARO treatment was well tolerated in both the double-blind and open-label treatment periods within the ARAMIS study.
      • Similar rates of discontinuation were noted in both treatment periods due to adverse events in the DARO and the placebo-treated groups (8.9% and 8.7%, respectively).
      • A lower rate of discontinuation due to disease progression was noted in the DARO arm vs the placebo-treated group (12.5% vs 25.3%, respectively) during the double-blind treatment period; similar discontinuation rates were noted in the extended follow-up for both the double-blind and open-label treatment periods (12.6% each)
      • 98.8% of patients in the trial received the full planned dose of DARO (in both the double-blind and open-label periods), with all patients who required dose adjustments able to reescalate to the full treatment dose.
      • No significant cardiovascular or neurological safety events were noted in the extended follow-up, however a slight increase in fatigue was reported.
    • In the ARAMIS trial, treatment with DARO demonstrated a favorable tolerability and safety profile, which will have clinical use implications.