[HTML][HTML] Preliminary results of the European multicentric phase III trial regarding sirolimus in slow-flow vascular malformations

E Seront, A Van Damme, C Legrand… - JCI insight, 2023 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
E Seront, A Van Damme, C Legrand, A Bisdorff-Bresson, P Orcel, T Funck-Brentano
JCI insight, 2023ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
BACKGROUND Slow-flow vascular malformations frequently harbor activating mutations in
the PI3K/AKT/mTOR cascade. Phase II trials pinpointed sirolimus effectiveness as a drug
therapy. Efficacy and safety of sirolimus thus need to be evaluated in large prospective
phase III trials. METHODS The Vascular Anomaly-Sirolimus-Europe (VASE) trial, initiated in
2016, is a large multicentric prospective phase III trial (EudraCT 2015-001703-32), which
evaluates efficacy and safety of sirolimus for 2 years in pediatric and adult patients with …
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Slow-flow vascular malformations frequently harbor activating mutations in the PI3K/AKT/mTOR cascade. Phase II trials pinpointed sirolimus effectiveness as a drug therapy. Efficacy and safety of sirolimus thus need to be evaluated in large prospective phase III trials.
METHODS
The Vascular Anomaly-Sirolimus-Europe (VASE) trial, initiated in 2016, is a large multicentric prospective phase III trial (EudraCT 2015-001703-32), which evaluates efficacy and safety of sirolimus for 2 years in pediatric and adult patients with symptomatic slow-flow vascular malformations. In this interim analysis, we studied all patients enrolled up to October 2021 who received sirolimus for 12 or more months or who prematurely stopped the treatment.
RESULTS
Thirty-one pediatric and 101 adult patients were included in this analysis; 107 completed 12 or more months of sirolimus, including 61 who were treated for the whole 2-year period. Sirolimus resulted in a clinical improvement in 85% of patients. The efficacy appeared within the first month for the majority of them. Grade 3–4 adverse events were observed in 24 (18%) patients; all resolved after treatment interruption/arrest. Sirolimus increased feasibility of surgery or sclerotherapy in 20 (15%) patients initially deemed unsuitable for intervention. Among the 61 patients who completed the 2-year treatment, 33 (54%) reported a recurrence of symptoms after a median follow-up of 13 months after sirolimus arrest. While there was no difference in efficacy, clinical improvement was faster but subsided more rapidly in PIK3CA-mutated (n= 24) compared with TIE2-mutated (n= 19) patients.
CONCLUSION
Sirolimus has a high efficacy and good tolerance in treatment of slow-flow vascular malformations in children and adults.
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