ORLANDOThe tyrosine inhibitor imatinib(Drug information on imatinib) mesylate (Gleevec) is active in gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) but not in other soft-tissue sarcomas not characterized by C-KIT or PDGF-R expression, the targets of imatinib, Ian R. Judson, MD, said at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting (abstract 1609).
Dr. Judson reported phase II data on behalf of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Soft Tissue and Bone Sarcoma Group. He is a medical oncologist at the Royal Marsden Hospital, London.
The multicenter study enrolled 27 patients with GIST and 24 with CD117-negative non-GIST soft-tissue sarcomas. (CD117 is a marker for KIT.) GISTs were required to be KIT positive. All patients had locally advanced unresectable and/or metastatic disease. About half of the GIST patients (52%) and most of the non-GIST patients (92%) had received prior chemotherapy.
The non-GIST soft-tissue sarcoma patients tended to have pulmonary metastases, but few of the GIST patients had lung lesions. Liver metastases were present in the minority of the non-GIST population but in most GIST patients.
Patients came off treatment quickly in the non-GIST group but tended to continue imatinib for long periods in the GIST population.
The most common side effects were anemia, granulocytopenia, edema, fatigue, rash, and nausea. Grade 3-4 toxicities were rare and generally not a problem at the dose used (800 mg daily). Grade 2 anemia, edema, and fatigue were relatively common.
"It was our clinical impression that some of the toxicities we observed tended to become less severe with prolonged treatment. This was the case for edema, where gradually the grade 2 toxicity faded away leaving just a little grade 1 periorbital edema, which some patients never lose," Dr. Judson said. Skin rash similarly occurred up to grade 3 toxicity levels but tended to disappear with time. Nausea also tended to resolve over time.
