Vandetanib improved weight in patients with medullary thyroid cancer
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Three months after treatment with vandetanib, patients with medullary thyroid cancer displayed restored muscle and adipose tissues, results from a study indicated.
According to researchers, 33 patients (mean age, 54 years; 76% men) with medullary thyroid carcinoma were assigned vandetanib (Caprelsa, AstraZeneca; n=23) or placebo (n=10) in the international, double blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial, also known as the ZETA study. It was conducted at Institut Gustave Roussy in Villejuif, France.
Visceral adiposity tissue, subcutaneous adiposity tissue and skeletal mass were measured, and dose-limiting toxicities were prospectively recorded, according to researchers.
Data at 3 months indicated that patients administered vandetanib gained 1.5 kg of body weight (P=.02), 1.3 cm2/m2 of skeletal mass (P=.009), 4.5 cm2/m2 of subcutaneous adiposity tissue (P=.004); and gained more visceral adiposity tissue (5.1 cm2/m2; P=.02) compared with the placebo group.
Additionally, patients with dose-limiting toxicities demonstrated lower skeletal mass index (37.2 cm2/m2 vs. 44.3 cm2/m2; P=.003) and higher serum concentrations of vandetanib (1,091 ng/mL vs. 739 ng/mL; P=.004). Those with skeletal mass index <43.1 cm2/m2 tended to have a higher probability of dose-limiting toxicities (73% vs. 14%; P=.004) and greater serum concentrations of vandetanib (1,037 ng/mL vs. 745 ng/mL; P=.04), researchers wrote.
Moreover, patients with the highest serum concentrations of the drug displayed 78% more dose-limiting toxicities vs. intermediate (40%) and lower (20%) levels (P=.04).
“Further research is needed to explore the relationship between body composition changes and vandetanib treatment and long-term evolution of patients’ body composition treated with vandetanib,” the researchers concluded.
Disclosure: Massicotte and two other researchers report attending advisory boards for, honoraria from, and/or research funding by AstraZeneca.