| Literature DB >> 23355099 |
Piotr Rutkowski1, Joanna Przybył, Marcin Zdzienicki.
Abstract
On the basis of the recently published results of a clinical trial comparing 12 and 36 months of imatinib in adjuvant therapy for gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs), which demonstrated clinical benefit of longer imatinib treatment in terms of delaying recurrences and improving overall survival, both the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency have updated their recommendations and approved 36 months of imatinib treatment in patients with v-kit Hardy-Zuckerman 4 feline sarcoma viral oncogene homolog (KIT)-positive GISTs (also known as CD117-positive GISTs) at high risk of recurrence after surgical resection of a primary tumor. This article discusses patient selection criteria for extended adjuvant therapy with imatinib, different classifications of risk of recurrence, and assessment of the response to therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23355099 PMCID: PMC3565084 DOI: 10.1007/s40291-013-0018-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Diagn Ther ISSN: 1177-1062 Impact factor: 4.074
Molecular classification of gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) according to v-kit Hardy-Zuckerman 4 feline sarcoma viral oncogene homolog (KIT) and platelet-derived growth factor receptor, alpha polypeptide (PDGFRA) mutational status
| Genotype | Features |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Exon 11 | Most common mutation in sporadic GISTs (65–70 %); present in tumors localized at all gastrointestinal sites; best response to imatinib; also reported in familial GISTs |
| Exon 9 | More common in GISTs originating from the small bowel/colon; intermediate/dose-dependent response to imatinib in advanced GISTs |
| Exon 13 | Present in tumors localized at all gastrointestinal sites; observed clinical responses to imatinib; reported in familial GISTs; more often as secondary mutations in imatinib-resistant tumors |
| Exon 17 | Present in tumors localized at all gastrointestinal sites; observed clinical responses to imatinib (except for p.D816V); reported in familial GISTs; more often as secondary mutations in imatinib-resistant tumors |
|
| |
| Exon 12 | Present in tumors localized at all gastrointestinal sites; observed clinical responses to imatinib |
| Exon 14 | Only a few cases described in the literature; more common in GISTs originating from the stomach |
| Exon 18 | More common in GISTs originating from the stomach, usually with epithelioid morphology; often related to indolent clinical behavior; p.D842V is the most common and is resistant to imatinib; other exon 18 mutations are sensitive to imatinib |
|
| Frequent in pediatric GISTs; poor response to imatinib; typical for GISTs related to neurofibromatosis type 1, Carney’s triad (gastric GIST + pulmonary chondroma ± paraganglioma), or Carney-Stratakis syndrome (GIST + paraganglioma, characterized by mutations in genes encoding SDH subunits SDHA, SDHB, SDHC, SDHD), and/or IGF1R expression |
IGF1R insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor, SDH succinate dehydrogenase
The most important clinical trials of adjuvant therapy with imatinib in gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs)
| Study | Study design | No. of patients | Major eligibility criteria | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary endpoint | Secondary endpoints | ||||
| ACOSOG Z9000, DeMatteo et al. 2009 [ | One arm, open, multicenter; imatinib 400 mg daily for 1 year | 107 | Primary GIST KIT-positive after radical resection; high risk of relapse: tumor size ≥10 cm | OS at median follow-up of 4 years; 1-year OS: 99 %; 2-year OS: 97 %; 3-year OS: 97 % | RFS at median follow-up of 4 years; 1-year RFS: 94 %; 2-year RFS: 73 %; 3-year RFS: 61 % |
| Kang et al. 2009 [ | One arm, open, multicenter, prospective; imatinib 400 mg daily for 2 years | 47 | Primary GIST with exon 11 | RFS at median follow-up of 26.9 months; 1-year RFS: 97.7 %; 2-year RFS: 92.7 % | |
| Li et al. 2011 [ | Open, non-randomized, prospective, one center; imatinib 400 mg daily for 3 years versus observation | 56 (imatinib), 49 (observation) | Primary GIST KIT-positive after resection; intermediate or high risk of recurrence (NIH classification): tumor size >5 cm | Significantly better RFS in the imatinib arm as compared with observation at median follow-up of 45 months (HR 0.188, 95 % CI 0.085–0.417; | Significantly decreased risk of death due to GIST with adjuvant imatinib therapy in comparison with observation at median follow-up of 45 months (HR 0.254, 95 % CI 0.070–0.931; |
| Jiang et al. 2011 [ | Non-randomized, one center, prospective; imatinib 400 mg daily for 5 years versus observation | 35 (imatinib), 55 (observation) | Primary GIST KIT-positive after R0 resection; high risk of relapse (modified NIH classification) | Significantly better RFS with imatinib as compared with observation at median follow-up of 44.0 months (HR 0.122, 95 % CI 0.041–0.363; | |
| ACOSOG Z9001, DeMatteo et al. 2009 [ | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized, multicenter; imatinib 400 mg daily versus placebo for 1 year | 359 (imatinib), 354 (placebo) | Primary GIST KIT-positive after radical resection; tumor size ≥3 cm; low, intermediate, or high risk of relapse | Significant improvement in 1-year RFS in the imatinib arm (98 %) as compared with placebo (83 %); median follow-up time 19.7 months; HR 0.35; | Lack of statistically significant difference in 1-year OS between study arms (HR 0.66; |
| SSGXVIII/AIO, Joensuu et al. 2012 [ | Two arms, open, randomized, multicenter, prospective; imatinib 400 mg daily for 1 versus 3 years | 200 (1 year), 200 (3 years) | Primary GIST KIT-positive after radical resection; high risk of relapse (modified NIH classification): tumor size >10 cm | Significant improvement in RFS with 3-year imatinib therapy as compared with 1-year therapy at median follow-up of 54 months (HR 0.46, 95 % CI 0.32–0.65; | Significant improvement in OS with 3-year imatinib therapy as compared with 1-year therapy at median follow-up of 54 months (HR 0.45, 95 % CI 0.22–0.89; |
| EORTC 62024, Hohenberger at al. 2012 [ | Two arms, open, randomized, multicenter, prospective; imatinib 400 mg daily for 2 years versus observation | 906 | Primary GIST KIT-positive after radical resection; intermediate or high risk of relapse (NIH classification): tumor size >5 cm | Time to imatinib failure at relapse (changed from OS) | RFS, OS, safety: results are expected in 2013 |
ACOSOG American College of Surgeons Oncology Group, AIO Arbeitsgemeinschaft Internistische Onkologie, CI confidence interval, EORTC European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer, HPFs high-powered fields, HR hazard ratio, KIT v-kit Hardy-Zuckerman 4 feline sarcoma viral oncogene homolog, NIH National Institutes of Health, OS overall survival, R0 microscopically radical resection of the tumor, RFS recurrence-free survival, SSG Scandinavian Sarcoma Group
aStudies evaluating adjuvant therapy with imatinib for at least 3 years
National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN)–Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (AFIP) risk criteria after resection of primary gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs), according to Miettinen and Lasota [9]
| Tumor parameters | Primary tumor location and risk of recurrence | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Size | Mitotic index | Stomach | Duodenum | Small intestine | Rectum |
| ≤2 cm | ≤5/50 HPFs | 0 % | 0 % | 0 % | 0 % |
| >2 cm, ≤5 cm | Very low (1.9 %) | Low (8.3 %) | Low (4.3 %) | Low (8.5 %) | |
| >5 cm, ≤10 cm | Low (3.6 %) | High (34 %) | Intermediate (24 %) | High (57 %) | |
| >10 cm | Intermediate (12 %) | High (52 %) | |||
| ≤2 cm | >5/50 HPFs | Insufficient data | Insufficient data | High (50 %) | High (52–71 %) |
| >2 cm, ≤5 cm | Intermediate (16 %) | High (50–86 %) | High (73–90 %) | ||
| >5 cm, ≤10 cm | High (55–86 %) | ||||
| >10 cm | |||||
HPFs high-powered fields
Fig. 1Recurrence-free survival in small-bowel gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs), according to National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN)–Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (AFIP) risk categories (based on the authors’ own data from 659 primary GISTs after radical resection, presented during the European Society of Surgical Oncology conference [100])