In patients with advanced gastric cancer who were treated with prior chemotherapy, ramucirumab has shown improved survival when administered in combination with paclitaxel or as monotherapy [12, 13], but this has not been extensively studied outside of clinical trials [14]. To our knowledge, this study is the first to report outcomes of ramucirumab in a large cohort in a real-world clinical setting in Asia. In addition, we validated the prognostic factors by Fuchs [15] and investigated predictive candidate biomarkers for the efficacy of ramucirumab in our EAP data.
In our data, ramucirumab showed similar efficacy and toxicities to those found in the RAINBOW and REGARD trials [12, 13]. In the combination group, the ORR and DCR were slightly lower than those in RAINBOW (ORR, 16.7 vs. 28%; DCR, 66.2 vs. 79%) [13]. The safety profile of combination therapy in our study was similar to the RAINBOW result (Supplementary Table 3), including hematological and non-hematological adverse events and VEGFR pathway-related toxicities. In general, ramucirumab monotherapy did not developed severe neutropenia and febrile neutropenia [12]. However, in our study, febrile neutropenia (2.7%) and severe neutropenia (8.1%) were developed in patients treated with ramucirumab monotherapy. This patient who developed febrile neutropenia was suffered from upper respiratory symptom, such as cough and rhinorrhoea, at the time of admission for febrile neutropenia. The subject’s condition was improved shortly after supportive care. Although the febrile neutropenia was possibly related to severe respiratory syndrome, the investigator could not exclude the causal relationship between febrile neutropenia and ramucirumab. Three patients with severe neutropenia had grade 1 neutropenia at baseline. Therefore, the neutropenia from ramucirumab monotherapy might be developed in patients with bone marrow suppression before the treatment.
GI perforation rate was slightly higher than RAINBOW trial [7 (3.1%) of 228 vs. 4 (1.2%) of 327]. In five of seven patients, GI perforation was associated with procedures, most commonly stent therapy (3 out of 7). According to a meta-analysis regarding perforation in colorectal stenting, bevacizumab-based therapy was identified as a risk factor, with a perforation rate of 12.5% [16]. In contrast, the perforation risk was 7.0% in patients treated with chemotherapy without bevacizumab and was 9% in patients not treated with chemotherapy during stent therapy [16]. Although a causal relationship between GI perforation and stents in RAINBOW was not proven, the higher incidence of GI perforation in our results might be associated with GI stents. However, the incidences of other ramucirumab-related adverse events of special interest were similar to those observed in RAINBOW. Therefore, clinicians should be aware of the risk of GI perforation in patients receiving combination treatment, especially those with GI stents.
Although the sample size was small, the ORR was slightly higher and the DCR slightly lower in the monotherapy group than in REGARD (ORR, 5.4 vs. 3%; DCR, 37.8 vs. 49%) [12]. The median OS for the monotherapy group was 6.4 months (IQR 7.3–9.2), which was slightly longer than that in REGARD (median OS, 5.2 months, IQR 2.3–9.9) [12]. We had no treatment-related deaths or withdrawals due to drug-related adverse events from monotherapy. The most common adverse event in the monotherapy group was anemia (51.3%); otherwise, the safety profile of monotherapy in our study was similar to that of REGARD (Supplementary Table 4) [12].
We included nine patients who had an ECOG PS of 2 during ramucirumab administration, although they had an ECOG PS ≤ 1 at screening. Our results may be more representative of advanced gastric cancer patients in the real-world clinical setting, because our population included those who would have been excluded from a clinical trial because of poor medical condition.
Identifying predictive biomarkers to stratify patients for treatment is vital. Although several predictive biomarkers of anti-angiogenic therapy have been evaluated, no reproducible blood or tissue biomarkers have been identified [17]. In addition, none of the biomarkers, including VEGFR2 and HER2 in tumor tissue and soluble VEGF-C, -D, VEGFR1, and VEGFR3, was significantly associated with ramucirumab efficacy in REGARD [18]. In addition, Fuchs et al. identified 12 independent prognostic factors of poor survival from RAINBOW and REGARD trials [15]. The 12 prognostic factors of poor OS were peritoneal metastases, ECOG PS 1, the presence of a primary tumor, time to progression since prior therapy < 6 months, poor/unknown tumor differentiation, abnormally low blood levels of albumin, sodium, and/or lymphocytes, abnormally high blood levels of neutrophils, AST, ALP, and/or LDH. Among the 12 prognostic factors, low albumin was the only independent prognostic factor of poor OS in our EAP data. Although Fuchs did not identify the prognostic marker for PFS, we applied the 12 prognostic markers to PFS in our study. Th low albumin and high ALP were independently associated with poor PFS in our study.
To discover another prognostic biomarker for PFS and OS, we evaluated baseline clinicopathologic parameters including blood laboratory test. In multivariate analysis, the high ALP, low Albumin, and high NLR were the independent factors for poor PFS, and low albumin, high NLR, number of metastatic sites, and large amount of ascites were independent factors for poor OS in our study. The independent prognostic markers for PFS are usually not identical to those for OS [19,20,21]. One explanation for the difference between prognostic factors of PFS and OS is that OS might be influenced by subsequent treatment after disease progression. In our study, 119 of 265 (44.9%) patients were treated with subsequent treatment after progression with ramucirumab.
In conclusion, analysis of the current EAP cohort of Korean patients with advanced gastric cancer showed that ramucirumab treatment had a manageable safety profile and antitumor activity. These findings are consistent with the safety and activity profiles in the RAINBOW and REGARD trials. We observed that GI perforation occurred more frequently in patients with stents in the combination group; therefore, ramucirumab should be administered with caution in these patients.