Extrapolating evidence for molecularly targeted therapies from common to rare cancers: a scoping review of methodological guidance

Objectives Cancer is increasingly classified according to biomarkers that drive tumour growth and therapies developed to target them. In rare biomarker-defined cancers, randomised controlled trials to adequately assess targeted therapies may be infeasible. Extrapolating existing evidence of targeted...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sarah J Lord, Saskia Cheyne, John Simes, Doah Cho, Chee Khoon Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2022-07-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/12/7/e058350.full
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832576800545308672
author Sarah J Lord
Saskia Cheyne
John Simes
Doah Cho
Chee Khoon Lee
author_facet Sarah J Lord
Saskia Cheyne
John Simes
Doah Cho
Chee Khoon Lee
author_sort Sarah J Lord
collection DOAJ
description Objectives Cancer is increasingly classified according to biomarkers that drive tumour growth and therapies developed to target them. In rare biomarker-defined cancers, randomised controlled trials to adequately assess targeted therapies may be infeasible. Extrapolating existing evidence of targeted therapy from common cancers to rare cancers sharing the same biomarker may reduce evidence requirements for regulatory approval in rare cancers. It is unclear whether guidelines exist for extrapolation. We sought to identify methodological guidance for extrapolating evidence from targeted therapies used for common cancers to rare biomarker-defined cancers.Design Scoping review.Data sources Websites of health technology assessment agencies, regulatory bodies, research groups, scientific societies and industry. EBM Reviews—Cochrane Methodology Register and Health Technology Assessment, Embase and MEDLINE databases (1946 to 11 May 2022).Eligibility criteria Papers proposing a framework or recommendations for extrapolating evidence for rare cancers, small populations and biomarker-defined cancers.Data extraction and synthesis We extracted framework details where available and guidance for components of extrapolation. We used these components to structure and summarise recommendations.Results We identified 23 papers. One paper provided an extrapolation framework but was not cancer specific. Extrapolation recommendations addressed six distinct components: strategies for grouping cancers as the same biomarker-defined disease; analytical validation requirements of a biomarker test to use across cancer types; strategies to generate control data when a randomised concurrent control arm is infeasible; sources to inform biomarker clinical utility assessment in the absence of prospective clinical evidence; requirements for surrogate endpoints chosen for the rare cancer; and assessing and augmenting safety data in the rare cancer.Conclusions In the absence of an established framework, our recommendations for components of extrapolation can be used to guide discussions about interpreting evidence to support extrapolation. The review can inform the development of an extrapolation framework for biomarker-targeted therapies in rare cancers.
format Article
id doaj-art-fb8e0d11adc14493985bdedd16769a0f
institution Kabale University
issn 2044-6055
language English
publishDate 2022-07-01
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format Article
series BMJ Open
spelling doaj-art-fb8e0d11adc14493985bdedd16769a0f2025-01-30T23:35:10ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552022-07-0112710.1136/bmjopen-2021-058350Extrapolating evidence for molecularly targeted therapies from common to rare cancers: a scoping review of methodological guidanceSarah J Lord0Saskia Cheyne1John Simes2Doah Cho3Chee Khoon Lee415 NHMRC Clinical Trials Centre, Camperdown, New South Wales, AustraliaNHMRC Clinical Trials Centre, Camperdown, New South Wales, AustraliaNHMRC Clinical Trials Centre, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, AustraliaNHMRC Clinical Trials Centre, Camperdown, New South Wales, AustraliaNHMRC Clinical Trials Centre, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, New South Wales, AustraliaObjectives Cancer is increasingly classified according to biomarkers that drive tumour growth and therapies developed to target them. In rare biomarker-defined cancers, randomised controlled trials to adequately assess targeted therapies may be infeasible. Extrapolating existing evidence of targeted therapy from common cancers to rare cancers sharing the same biomarker may reduce evidence requirements for regulatory approval in rare cancers. It is unclear whether guidelines exist for extrapolation. We sought to identify methodological guidance for extrapolating evidence from targeted therapies used for common cancers to rare biomarker-defined cancers.Design Scoping review.Data sources Websites of health technology assessment agencies, regulatory bodies, research groups, scientific societies and industry. EBM Reviews—Cochrane Methodology Register and Health Technology Assessment, Embase and MEDLINE databases (1946 to 11 May 2022).Eligibility criteria Papers proposing a framework or recommendations for extrapolating evidence for rare cancers, small populations and biomarker-defined cancers.Data extraction and synthesis We extracted framework details where available and guidance for components of extrapolation. We used these components to structure and summarise recommendations.Results We identified 23 papers. One paper provided an extrapolation framework but was not cancer specific. Extrapolation recommendations addressed six distinct components: strategies for grouping cancers as the same biomarker-defined disease; analytical validation requirements of a biomarker test to use across cancer types; strategies to generate control data when a randomised concurrent control arm is infeasible; sources to inform biomarker clinical utility assessment in the absence of prospective clinical evidence; requirements for surrogate endpoints chosen for the rare cancer; and assessing and augmenting safety data in the rare cancer.Conclusions In the absence of an established framework, our recommendations for components of extrapolation can be used to guide discussions about interpreting evidence to support extrapolation. The review can inform the development of an extrapolation framework for biomarker-targeted therapies in rare cancers.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/12/7/e058350.full
spellingShingle Sarah J Lord
Saskia Cheyne
John Simes
Doah Cho
Chee Khoon Lee
Extrapolating evidence for molecularly targeted therapies from common to rare cancers: a scoping review of methodological guidance
BMJ Open
title Extrapolating evidence for molecularly targeted therapies from common to rare cancers: a scoping review of methodological guidance
title_full Extrapolating evidence for molecularly targeted therapies from common to rare cancers: a scoping review of methodological guidance
title_fullStr Extrapolating evidence for molecularly targeted therapies from common to rare cancers: a scoping review of methodological guidance
title_full_unstemmed Extrapolating evidence for molecularly targeted therapies from common to rare cancers: a scoping review of methodological guidance
title_short Extrapolating evidence for molecularly targeted therapies from common to rare cancers: a scoping review of methodological guidance
title_sort extrapolating evidence for molecularly targeted therapies from common to rare cancers a scoping review of methodological guidance
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/12/7/e058350.full
work_keys_str_mv AT sarahjlord extrapolatingevidenceformolecularlytargetedtherapiesfromcommontorarecancersascopingreviewofmethodologicalguidance
AT saskiacheyne extrapolatingevidenceformolecularlytargetedtherapiesfromcommontorarecancersascopingreviewofmethodologicalguidance
AT johnsimes extrapolatingevidenceformolecularlytargetedtherapiesfromcommontorarecancersascopingreviewofmethodologicalguidance
AT doahcho extrapolatingevidenceformolecularlytargetedtherapiesfromcommontorarecancersascopingreviewofmethodologicalguidance
AT cheekhoonlee extrapolatingevidenceformolecularlytargetedtherapiesfromcommontorarecancersascopingreviewofmethodologicalguidance