There's a Growing Need to Look Under the Hood of the Clinical Trial Model

Oncology Live®, Vol. 18/No. 17, Volume 18, Issue 16

The decades-long argument over whether zinc lozenges can shorten the duration of the common cold is far removed from the arena of cancer medicine, yet the studies conducted to settle the debate help illustrate the shortcomings of the clinical trial model that has dominated the oncology sphere.

Maurie Markman, MD

The decades-long argument over whether zinc lozenges can shorten the duration of the common cold is far removed from the arena of cancer medicine, yet the studies conducted to settle the debate help illustrate the shortcomings of the clinical trial model that has dominated the oncology sphere. The impact of zinc lozenges on people with colds has been highly controversial since the 1980s, with results from randomized studies both supporting and refuting the benefits of this rather simple, relatively inexpensive, and essentially nontoxic strategy. A recent meta-analysis examined individual patient data from 3 randomized, placebo-controlled trials that evaluated the effects of 80 to 92 mg/day of elemental zinc and concluded that use of the active agent resulted in a faster recovery.1 Seventy percent of the zinctreated patients recovered by day 5 compared with 27% of individuals who received placebo.1 And no serious adverse effects were observed.

But this is not quite the end of the story… The investigators also noted that despite the “strong evidence that properly composed zinc lozenges can increase the rate of recovery from the common cold, the majority of zinc lozenges on the market appear to [either] have too low doses of zinc or they contain substances that bind zinc ions, such as citric acid.”1 So after years of research and numerous clinical trials, one can conclude that although zinc lozenges may be of benefit in the duration of the common cold, the optimal dose and schedule may be unknown.

How does this happen? Why has it been so difficult to successfully conduct definitive trials of such a simple strategy to define an optimal dose/schedule of zinc that can quickly be converted to clinical use? Is it possible that perhaps there is an issue with clinical trials themselves?

In the oncology sphere, the experience with the zinc lozenge studies is not terribly unique. Neither is the routine acceptance of study conclusions as being objectively meaningful as long as the so-called gold standard of statistical significance has been attained. Consider, for example, the recent report of a phase III randomized trial that examined the clinical utility of adding bevacizumab to carboplatin-paclitaxel chemotherapy in women with recurrent, potentially platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer.2 The study added a second question about the role of secondary surgical cytoreduction prior to the delivery of systemic therapy (an ongoing component of this trial), which only compounded the complexity of the study’s interpretation.

Remarkably, the primary study endpoint was overall survival (OS), which may have been justified for the surgical question but was a highly questionable choice for a second-line ovarian cancer chemotherapy study in which previously reported trials—including those with the addition of bevacizumab—had failed to reveal an improvement in OS despite a statistically significant improvement in progression-free survival (PFS).3 And in fact, the study in question failed to achieve its prospectively defined intention-to-treat statistical endpoint of an improvement in OS with bevacizumab versus chemotherapy (median OS, 42.2 vs 37.3 months, respectively; HR, 0.829; P = .056).2

But wait. That is not the end of the story. By identifying “incorrect treatment interval stratification data” (affecting 7% of patients), a “sensitivity analysis of overall survival based on the audited treatment-free interval stratification gave an adjusted HR of 0.823 (P = .0447).”2 And with this, the magical threshold revealing improved OS had been achieved! As a result, the peer-reviewed manuscript could now conclude that this strategy “improved the median overall survival in patients with platinum-sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer.”2

This statistical manipulation could convert a “negative trial” into one for which the authors could declare that “our sensitivity analysis based on corrected treatment-free interval stratification indicates that this strategy might be an important addition to the therapeutic armamentarium in these patients.”

What? Would that conclusion not have been appropriate if only the PFS had been improved with the addition of bevacizumab, as clearly demonstrated in this study (HR, 0.628; P <.0001) and, as previously noted, if it had been the case in another very similar clinical trial?3 What is the logic behind this positive conclusion other than the questionable decision that the primary endpoint of this trial should be OS?

Similar questions should be posed about a preliminary report of another randomized phase III trial in the gynecologic cancer arena.4 In this study, 2 single-agent taxanes were compared with surveillance only following completion of frontline platinum-based chemotherapy. Again, remarkably, the primary endpoint was OS. So when the study demonstrated only a statistically significant improvement in PFS (HR, 0.738) for paclitaxel compared with surveillance, the investigators concluded that there was an absence of clinical utility based on a failure to observe an impact on the questionable primary study endpoint.4 In this situation, the value of paclitaxel maintenance therapy can be challenged because of the considerable neurotoxicity resulting from the taxane regimen. However, is it really appropriate to declare that this study failed to achieve a favorable efficacy endpoint when its basic design was fundamentally flawed? Other trials routinely cited as being “positive” in this clinical setting have utilized PFS rather than OS as their primary endpoint.5

The underlying issue here is that an objective interpretation of the clinical meaning of a phase III randomized trial in oncology requires far greater detail about study design and content than mere knowledge that the resulting measure of value was “P <.05.”

References

  1. Hemilä H, Fitzgerald JT, Petrus EJ, Prasad A. Zinc acetate lozenges may improve the recovery rate of common cold patients: an individual patient data meta-analysis. Open Forum Infect Dis. 2017;4(2):ofx059. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofx059.
  2. Coleman RL, Brady MF, Herzog TJ, et al. Bevacizumab and paclitaxel-carboplatin chemotherapy and secondary cytoreduction in recurrent, platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer (NRG Oncology/Gynecologic Oncology Group study GOG-0213): a multicentre, open-label, randomised phase 3 trial. Lancet Oncol. 2017;18(6):779-791. doi: 10.1016/S1470-2045(17)30279-6
  3. Aghajanian C, Blank SV, Goff BA, et al. OCEANS: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase III trial of chemotherapy with or without bevacizumab in patients with platinum-sensitive recurrent epithelial ovarian, primary peritoneal, or fallopian tube cancer. J Clin Oncol. 2012;30(17):2039-2045. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2012.42.0505
  4. Copeland LJ, Brady MF, Burger RA, et al. A phase III trial of maintenance therapy in women with advanced ovarian/fallopian tube/ peritoneal cancer after a complete clinical response to first-line therapy: an NRG Oncology Study [SOG abstract LBA1]. Gynecol Oncol. 2017;145(suppl 1):219. doi: org/10.1016/j.ygyno.2017.03.504.
  5. Burger RA, Brady MF, Bookman MA, et al; Gynecologic Oncology Group. Incorporation of bevacizumab in the primary treatment of ovarian cancer. N Engl J Med. 2011;365(26)2473-2483. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1104390.