‘The jury is still out’
The final results from TASCO1 suggest there may be some benefit from TT-B in patients with treatment-naive metastatic colorectal cancer, “but we don’t use it in the first line,” said Jeffery Clark, MD, an oncologist who was not involved in the study.
The trial supports the benefit of combining trifluridine/tipiracil with bevacizumab, and the results were “somewhat better” than he had expected, said Dr. Clark, director of clinical trials support at Mass General Cancer Center in Boston.
“Even though the results are encouraging, there were a couple of things about the trial that one has to at least think about,” Dr. Clark said in an interview.
He noted, for example, that a higher proportion of patients assigned to TT-B had prior adjuvant therapy (27.3% vs. 19.7%), and patients in the TT-B arm were also more likely to have second lines of systemic therapy, which could have skewed the results in favor of the experimental arm.
“I think, basically, the jury is still out until we see the results of the SOLSTICE trial,” he said.
The TASCO1 study was funded by Servier and Taiho. Dr. Van Cutsem has received research funding and served on an advisory board for Servier and other companies. Dr. Clark reported no relevant disclosures.
The Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium is sponsored by the American Gastroenterological Association, the American Society for Clinical Oncology, the American Society for Radiation Oncology, and the Society of Surgical Oncology.