| Literature DB >> 28293555 |
Luis Corrales1, Amanda Nogueira2, Francesco Passiglia3, Angela Listi4, Christian Caglevic5, Marco Giallombardo2, Luis Raez6, Edgardo Santos7, Christian Rolfo2.
Abstract
Lung carcinoma is the leading cause of death by cancer in the world. Nowadays, most patients will experience disease progression during or after first-line chemotherapy demonstrating the need for new, effective second-line treatments. The only approved second-line therapies for patients without targetable oncogenic drivers are docetaxel, gemcitabine, pemetrexed, and erlotinib and for patients with target-specific oncogenes afatinib, osimertinib, crizotinib, alectinib, and ceritinib. In recent years, evidence on the role of antiangiogenic agents have been established as important and effective therapeutic targets in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Nintedanib is a tyrosine kinase inhibitor targeting three angiogenesis-related transmembrane receptors (vascular endothelial growth factor, fibroblast growth factor, and platelet-derived growth factor). Several preclinical and clinical studies have proven the usefulness of nintedanib as an anticancer agent for NSCLC. The most important study was the phase III LUME-Lung 1 trial, which investigated the combination of nintedanib with docetaxel for second-line treatment in advanced NSCLC patients. The significant improvement in overall survival and the manageable safety profile led to the approval of this new treatment in Europe. This review focuses on the preclinical and clinical studies with nintedanib in NSCLC.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; clinical trials; nintedanib; non-small cell lung cancer; second-line treatment; target therapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28293555 PMCID: PMC5329017 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2017.00013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Early development of Target therapy in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
| Drug mechanism | Reference | Drug | Comparator | Median overall survival (OS) | Median OS regarding sequential combination of EGFR–TKI and chemotherapy | Median progression-free survival (PFS) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tyrosine kinase inhibitors | Zhou et al. ( | 154 | Erlotinib | Gemcitabine + carboplatin | 22.8 versus 27.2 months | 29.7 versus 20.7 or 11.2 months, respectively ( | NA |
| Yang et al. ( | 631 | Afatinib | Cisplatin/pemetrexed | 27.3 versus 24.3 months | NA | NA | |
| OR | |||||||
| Gemcitabine/cisplatin | |||||||
| ELCC ( | 60 | Osimertinib | platinum-pemetrexed | NA | NA | 19.3 months | |
| Noonan and Camidge ( | 343 | Crizotinib | platinum-pemetrexed | NA | 10.9 versus 7.0 months | ||
| Shaw et al. ( | 130 | Ceritinib | NA | NA | NA | 7 months | |
| Antiangiogenic agents | Sandler et al. ( | 878 | Bevacizumab + Paclitaxel + carboplatin | Paclitaxel + carboplatin | 12.3 versus 10.3 months ( | NA | 6.2 versus 4.5 months ( |
| Garon et al ( | 1,253 | Ramucirumab + Docetaxel | Docetaxel + Placebo | 10.5 versus 9.1 months ( | NA | 4.5 versus 3.0 months ( | |
| Blumenschein et al. ( | 52 | Sorafenib | NA | 6.7 months | NA | 2.7 months | |
| Heist et al. ( | 125 | Sunitinib | Sunitinib + Pemetrexed | 8.0 versus 6.7 versus 10.5 months | NA | 3.3 versus 3.7 versus 4.9 months | |
| OR | |||||||
| Pemetrexed |
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NA, non-applicable.
Figure 1Mechanism of action of nintedanib in lung cancer treatment.
From phase I to phase III clinical trials on nintedanib.
| Clinical trial (phase) | Reference | Patient characteristics | Drug combination | Response | Stable disease | Progression | Median PFS | Median OS | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stable disease or partial response | Partial response | Complete response | ||||||||||
| I | Doebele et al. ( | Chemotherapy-naïve advanced NSCLC | 26 | Paclitaxel + carboplatin + N | 50 mg/2 id | 22 (84.6) | 7 (26.9) | 0 | 15 (57.7) | NA | NA | NA |
| I/II | Ellis et al. ( | Advanced NSCLC preciously treated with first-line platinum-based chemotherapy | 26 | Pemetrexed + N | 100 mg | NA | NA | 1 (3.8) | 13 (50) | 8 (30.8) | 5.4 months | NA |
| I | Okamoto et al. ( | Advanced NSCLC previously treated | 42 | Docetaxel + N | 150–200 mg/2 id | 31 (73.7) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| II | Reck et al. ( | Stage IIIB/IV NSCLC | 73 | N | 150 or 250 mg/2 id | 43 (59) | 6.9 weeks | 21.9 weeks | ||||
| III | LUME-Lung 1 Trial ( | Stage IIIB/IV NSCLC progressing after first-line chemotherapy | 1,314 | Docetaxel + N | 200 mg/2 id | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 3.4 versus 2.7 months+ | 10.1 versus 9.1 months++ |
| Campos-Gomez and Campos-Gomez ( | Advanced NSCLC progressing after one line of chemotherapy | 17 | Docetaxel + N | 200 mg/2 id | NA | 13 (81.25) | NA | 3 (18.75) | NA | NA | 42 months | |
| Garcia Montes ( | Advanced lung adenocarcinoma who progressed to first-line treatment + bevacizumab | 99 | Docetaxel + N | 200 mg/2 id | 79 (79.6) | 52 (53) | NA | 26 (26.5) | 16 (16.3) | NA | NA | |
| LUME-Lung 2 Trial ( | Advanced non-squamous NSCLC previously treated with chemotherapy | 713 | Pemetrexed + N | 200 mg/2 id | 435 (61) | NA | NA | NA | NA | 4.4 versus 3.6 months | 12.2 versus 12.7 months | |
N, nintedanib; n, number of patients enrolled; NA, non-applicable; +, 4.2 months when considering group of patients with adenocarcinoma; ++, 12.6 versus 10.3 months when considering group of patients with adenocarcinoma, p = 0.0359.
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