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Martin Buck

Bio: Martin Buck is an academic researcher from Government of Western Australia Department of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Erlotinib & Epidermal growth factor receptor. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 4 publications receiving 847 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI
Robert L. Coleman1, Amit M. Oza2, Domenica Lorusso, Carol Aghajanian3, Ana Oaknin4, Andrew Dean, Nicoletta Colombo5, Johanne I Weberpals6, Andrew R Clamp7, Giovanni Scambia8, Alexandra Leary9, Robert W Holloway, Margarita Amenedo Gancedo, Peter C.C. Fong10, Jeffrey C. Goh11, David M. O'Malley12, Deborah K. Armstrong13, Jesus Garcia-Donas, Elizabeth M. Swisher14, Anne Floquet, Gottfried E. Konecny15, Iain A. McNeish16, Clare L. Scott17, Terri Cameron, Lara Maloney, Jeff Isaacson, Sandra Goble, Caroline Grace, Thomas Harding, Mitch Raponi, James Sun18, Kevin K. Lin, Heidi Giordano, Jonathan A. Ledermann19, Martin Buck, A Dean, Michael Friedlander, J C Goh11, Paul R. Harnett, G Kichenadasse20, C L Scott17, H Denys, Luc Dirix, Ignace Vergote, Laurie Elit, Prafull Ghatage, Amit M. Oza2, Marie Plante, Diane Provencher, J I Weberpals6, Stephen Welch, A Floquet, Laurence Gladieff, Florence Joly, A Leary9, Alain Lortholary, Jean-Pierre Lotz, J. Medioni, Olivier Tredan, Benoit You, A El-Balat, C Hänle, P Krabisch, T Neunhöffer, M Pölcher, Pauline Wimberger, Amnon Amit, S Kovel, M Leviov, Tamar Safra, Ronnie Shapira-Frommer, Salomon M. Stemmer, Alessandra Bologna, N Colombo5, Domenica Lorusso, Sandro Pignata, Roberto Sabbatini, G Scambia8, Stefano Tamberi, Claudio Zamagni, P C Fong10, A O'Donnell, M Amenedo Gancedo, A Casado Herraez, J Garcia-Donas, E M Guerra, A Oaknin4, I Palacio, Iris L. Romero, A Sanchez, Susana Banerjee, A Clamp7, Y Drew, Hani Gabra, D Jackson, Jonathan A. Ledermann19, I A McNeish16, Christine Parkinson, Melanie E Powell, C Aghajanian3, D K Armstrong13, Michael J. Birrer, Mary K. Buss, Setsuko K. Chambers, L-m Chen, Robert L. Coleman1, R W Holloway, G E Konecny15, L Ma, Mark A. Morgan, R T Morris, David G. Mutch, D M O'Malley12, B M Slomovitz, E M Swisher14, T Vanderkwaak, M Vulfovich 
TL;DR: This trial assessed rucaparib versus placebo after response to second-line or later platinum-based chemotherapy in patients with high-grade, recurrent, platinum-sensitive ovarian carcinoma harbouring a BRCA mutation or high percentage of genome-wide loss of heterozygosity.

1,139 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Maintenance erlotinib after first-line treatment in ovarian cancer did not improve progression-free or overall survival and global health/quality-of-life scores showed a significant difference during the first year (P = .0102) in favor of the observation arm.
Abstract: Purpose This trial evaluated the efficacy of maintenance erlotinib, an epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitor, after first-line chemotherapy. Patients and Methods Eligible patients had high-risk International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage I or stage II to IV epithelial ovarian, primary peritoneal, or fallopian tube cancer and were not selected for EGFR expression. All patients underwent first-line platinum-based chemotherapy (CT) and showed no signs of progression at the end of CT. Patients were randomly assigned to maintenance erlotinib 150 mg orally daily for 2 years or to observation. EGFR immunohistochemistry (IHC), fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), and mutation analyses were performed in 318 patients. Results Between October 2005 and February 2008, 835 patients were randomly assigned (median follow-up, 51 months). Twenty-six percent of the patients stopped erlotinib as a result of adverse effects (of these, 67% were due to rash). For erlotinib and ob...

101 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Maintenance erlotinib after first-line treatment in ovarian cancer did not improve progression-free or overall survival and the predictive value of IHC and FISH for EGFR, and EGFR mutations are being evaluated and will be presented at the meeting.
Abstract: LBA5000 Background: The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) has been found to be overexpressed in 55-98% of advanced epithelial ovarian cancer. This trial evaluated the efficacy of maintenance ...

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Outback trial as discussed by the authors was a multicentre, open-label, randomised, phase 3 trial done in 157 hospitals in Australia, China, Canada, New Zealand, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, and the USA.
Abstract: Standard treatment for locally advanced cervical cancer is chemoradiotherapy, but many patients relapse and die of metastatic disease. We aimed to determine the effects on survival of adjuvant chemotherapy after chemoradiotherapy.The OUTBACK trial was a multicentre, open-label, randomised, phase 3 trial done in 157 hospitals in Australia, China, Canada, New Zealand, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, and the USA. Eligible participants were aged 18 year or older with histologically confirmed squamous cell carcinoma, adenosquamous cell carcinoma, or adenocarcinoma of the cervix (FIGO 2008 stage IB1 disease with nodal involvement, or stage IB2, II, IIIB, or IVA disease), Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status 0-2, and adequate bone marrow and organ function. Participants were randomly assigned centrally (1:1) using a minimisation approach and stratified by pelvic or common iliac nodal involvement, requirement for extended-field radiotherapy, FIGO 2008 stage, age, and site to receive standard cisplatin-based chemoradiotherapy (40 mg/m2 cisplatin intravenously once-a-week for 5 weeks, during radiotherapy with 45·0-50·4 Gy external beam radiotherapy delivered in fractions of 1·8 Gy to the whole pelvis plus brachytherapy; chemoradiotherapy only group) or standard cisplatin-based chemoradiotherapy followed by adjuvant chemotherapy with four cycles of carboplatin (area under the receiver operator curve 5) and paclitaxel (155 mg/m2) given intravenously on day 1 of a 21 day cycle (adjuvant chemotherapy group). The primary endpoint was overall survival at 5 years, analysed in the intention-to-treat population (ie, all eligible patients who were randomly assigned). Safety was assessed in all patients in the chemoradiotherapy only group who started chemoradiotherapy and all patients in the adjuvant chemotherapy group who received at least one dose of adjuvant chemotherapy. The OUTBACK trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01414608, and the Australia New Zealand Clinical Trial Registry, ACTRN12610000732088.Between April 15, 2011, and June 26, 2017, 926 patients were enrolled and randomly assigned to the chemoradiotherapy only group (n=461) or the adjuvant chemotherapy group (n=465), of whom 919 were eligible (456 in the chemoradiotherapy only group and 463 in the adjuvant chemotherapy group; median age 46 years [IQR 37 to 55]; 663 [72%] were White, 121 [13%] were Black or African American, 53 [6%] were Asian, 24 [3%] were Aboriginal or Pacific islander, and 57 [6%] were other races) and included in the analysis. As of data cutoff (April 12, 2021), median follow-up was 60 months (IQR 45 to 65). 5-year overall survival was 72% (95% CI 67 to 76) in the adjuvant chemotherapy group (105 deaths) and 71% (66 to 75) in the chemoradiotherapy only group (116 deaths; difference 1% [95% CI -6 to 7]; hazard ratio 0·90 [95% CI 0·70 to 1·17]; p=0·81). In the safety population, the most common clinically significant grade 3-4 adverse events were decreased neutrophils (71 [20%] in the adjuvant chemotherapy group vs 34 [8%] in the chemoradiotherapy only group), and anaemia (66 [18%] vs 34 [8%]). Serious adverse events occurred in 107 (30%) in the adjuvant chemotherapy group versus 98 (22%) in the chemoradiotherapy only group, most commonly due to infectious complications. There were no treatment-related deaths.Adjuvant carboplatin and paclitaxel chemotherapy given after standard cisplatin-based chemoradiotherapy for unselected locally advanced cervical cancer increased short-term toxicity and did not improve overall survival; therefore, it should not be given in this setting.National Health and Medical Research Council and National Cancer Institute.

6 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evaluated efficacy and tolerability of C-based doublets in the subset of elderly pts (≥ 70 y) showed well balanced characteristics including geriatric parameters (body mass index, comorbidity) were well balanced between arms.
Abstract: 5031 Background: In the CALYPSO trial, carboplatin (C)-pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) demonstrated a superior therapeutic index (TI) versus C-paclitaxel (P) in patients (pts) with ROC >6 mo ...

5 citations


Cited by
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TL;DR: The use of maintenance therapy with olaparib provided a substantial benefit with regard to progression‐free survival among women with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer and a BRCA1/2 mutation, with a 70% lower risk of disease progression or death with olAParib than with placebo.
Abstract: Background Most women with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer have a relapse within 3 years after standard treatment with surgery and platinum-based chemotherapy. The benefit of the o...

1,552 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In patients with advanced ovarian cancer receiving first-line standard therapy including bevacizumab, the addition of maintenance olaparib provided a significant progression-free survival benefit, which was substantial in patients with HRD-positive tumors, including those without a BRCA mutation.
Abstract: Background Olaparib has shown significant clinical benefit as maintenance therapy in women with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer with a BRCA mutation. The effect of combining mainte...

962 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Urgent progress is needed to develop evidence and consensus-based treatment guidelines for each subgroup, and requires close international cooperation in conducting clinical trials through academic research groups such as the Gynecologic Cancer Intergroup.

882 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors review the progress made to date with PARP inhibitors, describe the expanding landscape of novel anticancer therapies targeting the DNA damage response and potential predictive biomarkers, mechanisms of resistance and combinatorial strategies are discussed.
Abstract: Genomic instability is a key hallmark of cancer that arises owing to defects in the DNA damage response (DDR) and/or increased replication stress. These alterations promote the clonal evolution of cancer cells via the accumulation of driver aberrations, including gene copy-number changes, rearrangements and mutations; however, these same defects also create vulnerabilities that are relatively specific to cancer cells, which could potentially be exploited to increase the therapeutic index of anticancer treatments and thereby improve patient outcomes. The discovery that BRCA-mutant cancer cells are exquisitely sensitive to inhibition of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase has ushered in a new era of research on biomarker-driven synthetic lethal treatment strategies for different cancers. The therapeutic landscape of antitumour agents targeting the DDR has rapidly expanded to include inhibitors of other key mediators of DNA repair and replication, such as ATM, ATR, CHK1 and CHK2, DNA-PK and WEE1. Efforts to optimize these therapies are ongoing across a range of cancers, involving the development of predictive biomarker assays of responsiveness (beyond BRCA mutations), assessment of the mechanisms underlying intrinsic and acquired resistance, and evaluation of rational, tolerable combinations with standard-of-care treatments (such as chemotherapeutics and radiation), novel molecularly targeted agents and immune-checkpoint inhibitors. In this Review, we discuss the current status of anticancer therapies targeting the DDR.

671 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To improve survival in this aggressive disease, access to appropriate evidence‐based care is requisite and individualized precision medicine will require prioritizing clinical trials of innovative treatments and refining predictive biomarkers that will enable selection of patients who would benefit from chemotherapy, targeted agents, or immunotherapy.
Abstract: Ovarian cancer is the second most common cause of gynecologic cancer death in women around the world. The outcomes are complicated, because the disease is often diagnosed late and composed of several subtypes with distinct biological and molecular properties (even within the same histological subtype), and there is inconsistency in availability of and access to treatment. Upfront treatment largely relies on debulking surgery to no residual disease and platinum-based chemotherapy, with the addition of antiangiogenic agents in patients who have suboptimally debulked and stage IV disease. Major improvement in maintenance therapy has been seen by incorporating inhibitors against poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) molecules involved in the DNA damage-repair process, which have been approved in a recurrent setting and recently in a first-line setting among women with BRCA1/BRCA2 mutations. In recognizing the challenges facing the treatment of ovarian cancer, current investigations are enlaced with deep molecular and cellular profiling. To improve survival in this aggressive disease, access to appropriate evidence-based care is requisite. In concert, realizing individualized precision medicine will require prioritizing clinical trials of innovative treatments and refining predictive biomarkers that will enable selection of patients who would benefit from chemotherapy, targeted agents, or immunotherapy. Together, a coordinated and structured approach will accelerate significant clinical and academic advancements in ovarian cancer and meaningfully change the paradigm of care.

663 citations