A Study of Epoetin Alfa Plus Standard Supportive Care Versus Standard Supportive Care Only in Anemic Patients With Metastatic Breast Cancer Receiving Standard Chemotherapy
A Randomized, Open-label, Multicenter, Phase 3 Study of Epoetin Alfa Plus Standard Supportive Care Versus Standard Supportive Care in Anemic Patients With Metastatic Breast Cancer Receiving Standard Chemotherapy
Sponsor: Janssen Research & Development, LLC
This PHASE3 trial investigates Breast Cancer and Neoplasm Metastasis and is currently completed. Janssen Research & Development, LLC leads this study, which shows 11 recorded versions since 2006 — indicating substantial longitudinal coverage. As an oncology study, it adds to the longitudinal record of treatment development for this indication.
Study Description(click to expand)Anemia is a common complication of the treatment of metastatic breast cancer and is related to the effects of chemotherapy and to chronic disease itself. This is a randomized, open-label, multicenter, international study to further examine the safety of the study drug used with standard supportive care (i.e., packed RBC transfusions) compared to standard supportive care alone, when used to treat anemia associated with chemotherapy. This study will be done in subjects with metastatic breast cancer who are being or will be treated with first-line chemotherapy with standard dose schedules of taxane monotherapy, or a taxane plus trastuzumab, or an anthracycline plus either a taxane or cyclophosphamide. The study hypothesis is that epoetin alfa, when used as supportive anemia care, does not increase the risk of tumor progression or death. The study treatment will be compared to the control treatment by comparing progression-free survival, i.e., the number of months from the date a patient is randomized into the trial to the date of the first documented disease progression or death. In addition to their chemotherapy, half of the subjects will be assigned to receive study drug (epoetin alfa) and half of the subjects will be assigned to standard supportive care...
Anemia is a common complication of the treatment of metastatic breast cancer and is related to the effects of chemotherapy and to chronic disease itself. This is a randomized, open-label, multicenter, international study to further examine the safety of the study drug used with standard supportive care (i.e., packed RBC transfusions) compared to standard supportive care alone, when used to treat anemia associated with chemotherapy. This study will be done in subjects with metastatic breast cancer who are being or will be treated with first-line chemotherapy with standard dose schedules of taxane monotherapy, or a taxane plus trastuzumab, or an anthracycline plus either a taxane or cyclophosphamide. The study hypothesis is that epoetin alfa, when used as supportive anemia care, does not increase the risk of tumor progression or death. The study treatment will be compared to the control treatment by comparing progression-free survival, i.e., the number of months from the date a patient is randomized into the trial to the date of the first documented disease progression or death. In addition to their chemotherapy, half of the subjects will be assigned to receive study drug (epoetin alfa) and half of the subjects will be assigned to standard supportive care for anemia. Subjects treated with the study drug will receive standard supportive care (packed RBC transfusions) plus 40,000 IU epoetin alfa given subcutaneously once a week until 4 weeks after the last cycle of chemotherapy or until disease progression, whichever comes first.The hypothesis is to test that epoetin alfa, when used as supportive anemia care, is non-inferior to control (standard supportive care alone), as measured by progression free survival (PFS). Patients treated with the study drug will receive standard supportive care (packed red blood cells (RBC) transfusions) plus 40,000 IU epoetin alfa given subcutaneously once a week until 4 weeks after the last cycle of chemotherapy or until disease progression, whichever comes first. Dose adjustments (dose escalation, dose reduction, dose interruption, and dose resumption) of epoetin alfa will be based on hemoglobin (Hb) and confirm to prescribing information.
Status Flow
Change History
11 versions recorded-
Dec 2025 — Present [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
-
Sep 2025 — Dec 2025 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
-
Sep 2024 — Sep 2025 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
-
Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
-
Jan 2021 — Jul 2024 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
▶ Show 6 earlier versions
-
Jun 2018 — Jan 2021 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
-
Apr 2018 — Jun 2018 [monthly]
Completed PHASE3
Status: Active Not Recruiting → Completed
-
Jul 2017 — Apr 2018 [monthly]
Active Not Recruiting PHASE3
-
May 2017 — Jul 2017 [monthly]
Active Not Recruiting PHASE3
-
Feb 2017 — May 2017 [monthly]
Active Not Recruiting PHASE3
-
Jan 2017 — Feb 2017 [monthly]
Active Not Recruiting PHASE3
First recorded
Mar 2006
Trial started
Per CT.gov start date — pre-dates our first snapshot
Eligibility Summary
No eligibility information available.
Contact Information
- Janssen Research & Development, LLC
For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .
Study Locations
Ahmedabad, India , Alexandria, United States , Anaheim, United States , Andra Pradesh, India , Arica, Chile , Arkhangelsk, Russia , Balashikha, Russia , Bandung, Indonesia , Bangalore, India , Barretos, Brazil and 164 more locations