Veliparib concomitant with first-line chemotherapy and as maintenance therapy in ovarian cancer: Final overall survival and disease-related symptoms results Journal Article


Authors: Coleman, R. L.; Fleming, G. F.; Brady, M. F.; Swisher, E. M.; Steffensen, K. D.; Friedlander, M.; Okamoto, A.; Moore, K. N.; Leath, C. A. 3rd; Cella, D.; Sun, Z.; Patel, S.; Tang, Z.; Ratajczak, C. K.; Aghajanian, C.; Bookman, M. A.
Article Title: Veliparib concomitant with first-line chemotherapy and as maintenance therapy in ovarian cancer: Final overall survival and disease-related symptoms results
Abstract: Introduction: In the VELIA trial, the addition of veliparib to standard first-line platinum-based chemotherapy and continued as maintenance resulted in significantly longer median progression-free survival (PFS) compared with carboplatin plus paclitaxel induction therapy alone (23.5 vs 17.3 months; p < 0.001) in patients with ovarian cancer. We now report final overall survival (OS) and updated safety and disease-related symptoms (DRS) from patient-reported outcomes of the trial. Methods: This randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, multicenter, phase 3 study enrolled adult women with an initial diagnosis of stage III/IV high-grade serous ovarian cancer undergoing primary or interval cytoreductive surgery. Patients were randomized 1:1:1 to chemotherapy plus veliparib followed by veliparib maintenance (veliparib-throughout), chemotherapy plus veliparib followed by placebo maintenance (veliparib-combination-only), or chemotherapy plus placebo followed by placebo maintenance (placebo-throughout). PFS was the primary endpoint; OS and DRS were secondary endpoints. Results: In the intention-to-treat population (N = 1140), median OS was 59.2 months (95 % confidence interval: 52.1, 68.2) for the veliparib-throughout group, 58.0 (50.6, 64.1) months for veliparib-combination-only, and 57.8 (52.3, 63.8) months for placebo-throughout. OS outcomes were not significantly different between arms overall or in the BRCA-deficient and homologous recombination-deficient cohorts. No new safety signals were identified during the longer follow-up period and DRS analyses indicated there was no significant additional symptom-related burden overall when veliparib was added to chemotherapy or used for maintenance. Conclusion: No OS or DRS benefit of addition of veliparib to platinum-based chemotherapy and continued as maintenance therapy was detected in this study, despite an observed benefit over chemotherapy alone in PFS. © 2025
Keywords: overall survival; ovarian cancer; maintenance; parp inhibitor; veliparib; phase 3 trial
Journal Title: European Journal of Cancer
Volume: 225
ISSN: 0959-8049
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2025-07-25
Start Page: 115587
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejca.2025.115587
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 40561681
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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