Population exposure-efficacy and exposure-safety analyses for rucaparib in patients with recurrent ovarian carcinoma from Study 10 and ARIEL2 Journal Article


Authors: Konecny, G. E.; Oza, A. M.; Tinker, A. V.; Oaknin, A.; Shapira-Frommer, R.; Ray-Coquard, I.; Aghajanian, C.; Coleman, R. L.; O'Malley, D. M.; Leary, A.; Chen, L. M.; Provencher, D.; Ma, L.; Brenton, J. D.; Castro, C.; Green, M.; Simmons, A. D.; Beltman, J.; Harding, T.; Lin, K. K.; Goble, S.; Maloney, L.; Kristeleit, R. S.; McNeish, I. A.; Swisher, E. M.; Xiao, J. J.
Article Title: Population exposure-efficacy and exposure-safety analyses for rucaparib in patients with recurrent ovarian carcinoma from Study 10 and ARIEL2
Abstract: Objective: To evaluate correlations between rucaparib exposure and selected efficacy and safety endpoints in patients with recurrent ovarian carcinoma using pooled data from Study 10 and ARIEL2. Methods: Efficacy analyses were limited to patients with carcinomas harboring a deleterious BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation who had received ≥2 prior lines of chemotherapy. Safety was evaluated in all patients who received ≥1 rucaparib dose. Steady-state daily area under the concentration-time curve (AUCss) and maximum concentration (Cmax,ss) for rucaparib were calculated for each patient and averaged by actual dose received over time (AUCavg,ss and Cmax,avg,ss) using a previously developed population pharmacokinetic model. Results: Rucaparib exposure was dose-proportional and not associated with baseline patient weight. In the exposure-efficacy analyses (n = 121), AUCavg,ss was positively associated with independent radiology review-assessed RECIST response in the subgroup of patients with platinum-sensitive recurrent disease (n = 75, p = 0.017). In the exposure-safety analyses (n = 393, 40 mg once daily to 840 mg twice daily [BID] starting doses), most patients received a 600 mg BID rucaparib starting dose, with 27% and 21% receiving 1 or ≥2 dose reductions, respectively. Cmax,ss was significantly correlated with grade ≥2 serum creatinine increase, grade ≥3 alanine transaminase/aspartate transaminase increase, platelet decrease, fatigue/asthenia, and maximal hemoglobin decrease (p < 0.05). Conclusion: The exposure-response analyses provide support for the approved starting dose of rucaparib 600 mg BID for maximum clinical benefit with subsequent dose modification only following the occurrence of a treatment-emergent adverse event in patients with BRCA-mutated recurrent ovarian carcinoma. © 2021
Keywords: safety; ovarian carcinoma; pharmacokinetics; efficacy; exposure; rucaparib
Journal Title: Gynecologic Oncology
Volume: 161
Issue: 3
ISSN: 0090-8258
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2021-06-01
Start Page: 668
End Page: 675
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.ygyno.2021.03.015
PUBMED: 33752918
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC9535637
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 July 2021 -- Source: Scopus
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