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Practice-defining NRG Oncology trial finds chemotherapy followed by letrozole is the standard for advanced, low grade serous gynecologic carcinoma

04.10.26 | NRG Oncology

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SAN JUAN, PR – Late breaking results from the phase III NRG GY019 trial indicate that letrozole monotherapy (L) did not demonstrate non inferiority to paclitaxel/carboplatin followed by letrozole (PC/L) for progression free survival (PFS) in patients with newly diagnosed stage II-IV low grade serous carcinoma of the ovary or peritoneum. At the protocol specified second interim analysis (median follow up 27.3 months), the hazard ratio (HR) for L versus PC/L was 1.30 (95% CI, 0.90–1.89), crossing the prespecified futility/non inferiority margin (HR > 1.213). As of the January 5, 2026 data cutoff, 77.9% of PC/L and 71.9% of L patients remained alive and progression free, and overall survival rates of 95% and 92%, respectively. These results were presented on April 10th, 2026 at the Opening Plenary Session of the Society of Gynecologic Oncology Annual Meeting on Women’s Cancer.

NRG-GY019 was designed as an international, phase III, noninferiority trial comparing both treatment options after primary cytoreductive surgery. Patients were enrolled and stratified by residual disease status after surgery and country following cytoreductive surgery. Patients were then randomized to receive either paclitaxel and carboplatin followed by letrozole (PC/L) or letrozole alone (L). This study included 450 patients which allowed for 80% power (1-sided α=0.1) to assess the noninferiority of L compared to PC/L by PFS. Two interim analyses were planned during the study.

PC/L was associated with significantly more serious side effects than L monotherapy, with the odds of experiencing at least one grade 3–4 event higher in the PC/L treatment arm (OR 4.26; 95% CI, 2.74–6.62). Additionally, in an exploratory analysis of the 286 study patients (64% of the study population) who underwent cytoreductive surgery to no apparent gross residual (NGR)--a subgroup with more favorable prognosis—the difference in the PFS outcomes between treatment arms was smaller, with a non-inferiority hazard ratio of 1.15 (95% CI, 0.68–1.94).

“This is the first Phase III frontline trial in rare ovarian cancer to complete enrollment — a milestone that demonstrates cooperative group sites, treating oncologists, and patient advocates can work together to design and successfully recruit patients for rare-tumor studies. NRG-GY019 is a practice-defining trial, establishing PC/L as the standard approach for patients with advanced low-grade serous ovarian carcinoma,” said Amanda Fader, MD, the lead author of the NRG-GY019 abstract and Director of the Center for Rare Gynecologic Cancers and Professor in the Departments of Gynecology and Obstetrics and Oncology at Johns Hopkins Hospital.

Translational endpoints remain under analysis and will be reported when available.

“The hypothesis-generating analysis in patients with NGR disease after surgery is provocative and raises the possibility that a clinically relevant subset of patients may be appropriate candidates for L monotherapy”, says Fader. “Ongoing clinical follow up and planned correlative tumor molecular profiling are essential to contextualize these observations, identify which patients derive the greatest benefit from PC/L, and determine whether L alone may be a reasonable alternative in select patients.”

This project was supported by grants U10CA180868 (NRG Oncology Operations) and U10CA180822 (NRG Oncology SDMC) from the National Cancer Institute (NCI).

Special Podcast Episode

Follow The NRG Oncology Podcast on Spotify , Apple Podcasts , and YouTube for a special episode interviewing Dr. Fader on the findings of the 2026 SGO Plenary Session Presentation for NRG-GY019. Podcast information and playable episodes are available on the NRG website as well.

Citation
Fader AN, Miller A, Gien L, Deery A, Rivard C, Cobb LP, Grisham RN, Holman LL, Kim K, Nagel C, Parker JE, May T, Thaker PH, Crane E, Musa FB, Ghamande S, Siddique S, Moore RG, Goodheart MJ, Werner TL, Martin L, Weston E, Covens A, Aghajanian C, Gershenson DM. Results of a Randomized Phase III Trial of Letrozole Alone Versus Paclitaxel and Carboplatin Followed by Letrozole as Initial Treatment for Patients with Stage II-IV Ovarian, Fallopian Tube, or Primary Peritoneal Low- Grade Serous Carcinoma (NRG-GY019, NCT04095364). Paper presented during the Plenary Session at the annual meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Oncology. San Juan, PR. (2026, April).

About NRG Oncology
NRG Oncology conducts practice-changing, multi-institutional clinical and translational research to improve the lives of patients with cancer. Founded in 2012, NRG Oncology is a Pennsylvania-based nonprofit corporation that integrates the research of the legacy National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project (NSABP), Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG), and Gynecologic Oncology Group (GOG) programs. The research network seeks to carry out clinical trials with emphasis on sex-specific malignancies, including gynecologic, breast, and prostate cancers, and on localized or locally advanced cancers of all types. NRG Oncology’s extensive research organization comprises multidisciplinary investigators, including medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, surgeons, physicists, pathologists, and statisticians, and encompasses more than 1,300 research sites located world-wide with predominance in the United States and Canada. NRG Oncology is supported primarily through grants from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and is one of five research groups in the NCI’s National Clinical Trials Network. www.nrgoncology.org

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Contact Information

Angela Pier
NRG Oncology
piera@nrgoncology.org

How to Cite This Article

APA:
NRG Oncology. (2026, April 10). Practice-defining NRG Oncology trial finds chemotherapy followed by letrozole is the standard for advanced, low grade serous gynecologic carcinoma. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8X5DW6Y1/practice-defining-nrg-oncology-trial-finds-chemotherapy-followed-by-letrozole-is-the-standard-for-advanced-low-grade-serous-gynecologic-carcinoma.html
MLA:
"Practice-defining NRG Oncology trial finds chemotherapy followed by letrozole is the standard for advanced, low grade serous gynecologic carcinoma." Brightsurf News, Apr. 10 2026, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8X5DW6Y1/practice-defining-nrg-oncology-trial-finds-chemotherapy-followed-by-letrozole-is-the-standard-for-advanced-low-grade-serous-gynecologic-carcinoma.html.