{"title":"Vimseltinib versus a placebo in patients with tenosynovial giant cell tumor: a plain language summary of the MOTION phase 3 trial.","authors":"Nicholas M Bernthal, Sydney Stern, Jean-Yves Blay","doi":"10.1080/14796694.2024.2398893","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>What is this summary about?: </strong>This article presents a patient-friendly summary of the MOTION <b>phase 3 clinical trial</b> results, which were published in <i>The Lancet</i> in June 2024.The primary goal of the MOTION trial was to understand if treatment with a drug called vimseltinib shrank tumors more than a placebo in participants with symptomatic tenosynovial giant cell tumor, also known as TGCT, for which surgery was unlikely to provide benefit. A placebo is something that looks like the treatment being studied but does not contain any medicine.The MOTION trial compared the effects of vimseltinib versus a placebo using several different outcomes associated with TGCT. These outcomes included tumor size, active range of motion of the affected joint, and several patient-reported quality-of-life measures including physical function, stiffness, overall health, and pain.</p><p><strong>What were the main conclusions reported by the researchers?: </strong>The trial showed that more participants treated with vimseltinib experienced significant tumor shrinkage, as defined by a 30% or greater reduction in tumor size, compared with those receiving a placebo. Participants receiving vimseltinib had improved active range of motion, and they reported improved physical function, stiffness, overall health, and pain, regardless of the amount of tumor shrinkage, compared with participants receiving a placebo. Most side effects in participants treated with vimseltinib were not severe and were manageable.</p><p><strong>What are the key takeaways?: </strong>Vimseltinib was better at shrinking tumors and improving active range of motion, stiffness, pain, and other health measures than the placebo for participants with TGCT. Vimseltinib has the potential to become a new treatment option for patients with TGCT for whom surgery may not provide benefit.</p>","PeriodicalId":12672,"journal":{"name":"Future oncology","volume":" ","pages":"1-10"},"PeriodicalIF":3.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Future oncology","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14796694.2024.2398893","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ONCOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
What is this summary about?: This article presents a patient-friendly summary of the MOTION phase 3 clinical trial results, which were published in The Lancet in June 2024.The primary goal of the MOTION trial was to understand if treatment with a drug called vimseltinib shrank tumors more than a placebo in participants with symptomatic tenosynovial giant cell tumor, also known as TGCT, for which surgery was unlikely to provide benefit. A placebo is something that looks like the treatment being studied but does not contain any medicine.The MOTION trial compared the effects of vimseltinib versus a placebo using several different outcomes associated with TGCT. These outcomes included tumor size, active range of motion of the affected joint, and several patient-reported quality-of-life measures including physical function, stiffness, overall health, and pain.
What were the main conclusions reported by the researchers?: The trial showed that more participants treated with vimseltinib experienced significant tumor shrinkage, as defined by a 30% or greater reduction in tumor size, compared with those receiving a placebo. Participants receiving vimseltinib had improved active range of motion, and they reported improved physical function, stiffness, overall health, and pain, regardless of the amount of tumor shrinkage, compared with participants receiving a placebo. Most side effects in participants treated with vimseltinib were not severe and were manageable.
What are the key takeaways?: Vimseltinib was better at shrinking tumors and improving active range of motion, stiffness, pain, and other health measures than the placebo for participants with TGCT. Vimseltinib has the potential to become a new treatment option for patients with TGCT for whom surgery may not provide benefit.
期刊介绍:
Future Oncology (ISSN 1479-6694) provides a forum for a new era of cancer care. The journal focuses on the most important advances and highlights their relevance in the clinical setting. Furthermore, Future Oncology delivers essential information in concise, at-a-glance article formats - vital in delivering information to an increasingly time-constrained community.
The journal takes a forward-looking stance toward the scientific and clinical issues, together with the economic and policy issues that confront us in this new era of cancer care. The journal includes literature awareness such as the latest developments in radiotherapy and immunotherapy, concise commentary and analysis, and full review articles all of which provide key findings, translational to the clinical setting.