Literature DB >> 28423535

Overall survival with crizotinib and next-generation ALK inhibitors in ALK-positive non-small-cell lung cancer (IFCT-1302 CLINALK): a French nationwide cohort retrospective study.

Michaël Duruisseaux1, Benjamin Besse2, Jacques Cadranel3, Maurice Pérol4, Bertrand Mennecier5, Laurence Bigay-Game6, Renaud Descourt7, Eric Dansin8, Clarisse Audigier-Valette9, Lionel Moreau10, José Hureaux11, Remi Veillon12, Josiane Otto13, Anne Madroszyk-Flandin14, Alexis Cortot15, François Guichard16, Pascaline Boudou-Rouquette17, Alexandra Langlais18, Pascale Missy19, Franck Morin19, Denis Moro-Sibilot1.   

Abstract

Overall survival (OS) with the anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) inhibitor (ALKi) crizotinib in a large population of unselected patients with ALK-positive non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is not documented. We sought to assess OS with crizotinib in unselected ALK-positive NSCLC patients and whether post-progression systemic treatments affect survival outcomes.ALK-positive NSCLC patients receiving crizotinib in French expanded access programs or as approved drug were enrolled. We collected clinical and survival data, RECIST-defined progressive disease (PD) and post-PD systemic treatment efficacy. We performed multivariable analysis of OS from crizotinib initiation and PD under crizotinib.At time of analysis, 209 (65.7%) of the 318 included patients had died. Median OS with crizotinib was 16.6 months. The line of crizotinib therapy did not impact survival outcomes. Of the 263 patients with PD, 105 received best supportive care, 74 subsequent drugs other than next-generation ALKi and 84 next-generation ALKi. Next-generation ALKi treatment correlated with better survival outcomes in multivariate analysis. These patients had a median post-PD survival of 25.0 months and median OS from metastatic disease diagnosis of 89.6 months.Unselected ALK-positive NSCLC patients achieve good survival outcomes with crizotinib therapy. Next-generation ALKi may provide survival improvement after PD under crizotinib.

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Keywords:  ALK; alectinib; ceritinib; crizotinib; lung cancer

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28423535      PMCID: PMC5400633          DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.15746

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncotarget        ISSN: 1949-2553


INTRODUCTION

The anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) gene is rearranged in approximately 5% of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cases, leading to constitutive activation of the ALK tyrosine kinase domain and tumorigenesis [1, 2]. Crizotinib is an inhibitor of ALK kinase activity that has demonstrated its superiority over conventional chemotherapy in advanced ALK-positive NSCLC [3, 4]. Crizotinib was compared to standard first-line and second-line chemotherapy in two randomized Phase III trials (PROFILE 1014 and PROFILE 1007), achieving higher response rates and a significantly longer median progression-free survival (PFS) [3, 4]. It is now approved worldwide for treating advanced ALK-positive NSCLC. The estimation of overall survival (OS) with crizotinib has not yet been fully documented. A retrospective analysis comparing 30 crizotinib-treated ALK-positive NSCLC patients to 23 crizotinib-naïve ones reported longer OS in the former (1-year OS: 70% vs. 44%; 2-year OS: 55% vs. 12%, respectively) [5]. In the PROFILE 1007 trial comparing crizotinib to pemetrexed or docetaxel as second-line following platinum-based regimen failure, an updated survival analysis showed a median OS with crizotinib at 21.7 months but identified no difference in OS between the crizotinib arm and chemotherapy arm, probably due to a cross-over in the chemotherapy arm [6]. Another limitation comes from the restrictive inclusion criteria implemented in clinical trials, meaning any benefit observed in a selected population might not reflect that in daily practice. Most patients experience progressive disease (PD) within one year of crizotinib initiation [3, 4]. Locally-ablative treatment could extend disease control with crizotinib in oligoprogressive disease [7, 8], and continuing crizotinib beyond PD (CBPD) might favourably impact survival outcomes [9]. Anecdotal clinical response to crizotinib rechallenge has been reported [10, 11]. The efficacy of conventional chemotherapy is debatable as very little clinical data is available after crizotinib failure [12]. Next-generation ALK inhibitors (ALKis) can overcome resistance to crizotinib. Ceritinib has proven efficacious in crizotinib-pretreated patients in a dose escalation Phase I trial (response rate: 56%; median PFS: 6.9 months), and has been approved by both FDA and EMA following crizotinib failure [13, 14]. Alectinib is also effective in crizotinib-pretreated patients (response rate: 48-55%; PFS: 8.1-8.9 months) and FDA approved [15-17]. Other promising next-generation ALKis are under clinical investigation [18, 19]. Given their efficacy, a potential survival benefit associated with using next-generation ALKi following crizotinib failure has been suspected, though not yet proven, in comparison with other systemic treatment options [20-22]. The IFCT-1302 CLINALK study sought to evaluate OS under crizotinib in a large unselected population of ALK-positive NSCLC patients. We also aimed to examine the different systemic treatments’ effect on survival following crizotinib and whether next-generation ALKis improve survival outcomes in this setting.

RESULTS

Patient characteristics

In total, 318 patients were selected for data collection and analysis (Figure 1). Of them, 214 met the inclusion criteria in the French crizotinib expanded access program (EAP) database. Following EAP discontinuation, 104 additional ALK-positive patients treated with crizotinib as second-line approved drug were enrolled.
Figure 1

Study flow chart

Table 1 presents the patients’ characteristics on initiating crizotinib. Half were male, the median age was under 60 years old, and the majority had never smoked and presented with adenocarcinomas. One third exhibited brain metastasis, and 77.3% PS 0 or 1.
Table 1

Baseline characteristics for the population at the time of crizotinib initiation

Characteristics, n (%)N=318
Age, years
 Median (range)58.3 (19.2–88.4)
 <65221 (69.5%)
 ≥6597 (30.5%)
Gender
 Male161 (50.6%)
 Female157 (49.4)
Ethnicity
 Non-Asian294 (98.3%)
 Asian5 (1.7%)
 MD19
Smoking status
 Current-smoker29 (9.4%)
 Former-smoker108 (34.8%)
 Never-smoker173 (55.8%)
 MD8
Histology
 Adenocarcinoma292 (91.8%)
 Large cell19 (6.0%)
 Other7 (2.2%)
ECOG PS
 092 (31.6%)
 1133 (45.7%)
 243 (14.8%)
 321 (7.2%)
 42 (0.7%)
 MD27
Stage at diagnosis
 Localized5 (1.6%)
 Locally-advanced45 (14.1%)
 Metastatic268 (84.3%)
Brain metastasis
 Yes111 (34.9%)
 No207 (65.1%)
Line of therapy before crizotinib
 016 (5.0%)
 1172 (54.1%)
 ≥2130 (40.9%)

MD = missing data; ECOG PS = Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status.

MD = missing data; ECOG PS = Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status. One hundred seventy-two patients (54.1%) received crizotinib as second-line treatment, 16 (5.0%) were treated in the front-line setting, 59 (18.6%) in third-line, and 71 (22.3%) in fourth- or further-line setting. The mean time from diagnosis of advanced disease to initiating crizotinib treatment was 13.9 months (95% CI: 12.4-15.5). Platinum- and pemetrexed-based chemotherapy were administered before crizotinib to 277 (91.7%) and 244 (80.8%) patients, respectively.

Crizotinib efficacy

Disease progression was observed in 284 patients (89.3%) by the time of data cut-off. The median PFS under crizotinib was 6.8 months (95% CI: 5.6-8.3). Of the 267 evaluable patients, one complete response (0.4%) and 133 partial responses (49.8%) were reported for an ORR of 50.2% (95% CI: 44.2-56.2). The DCR was 74.9% (95% CI: 69.7-80.1). At time of the analysis, 39 patients were still receiving crizotinib.

Analysis of overall survival with crizotinib

We lost 14 patients (4.4%) to follow-up. By the time of the analysis, 209 patients (65.7%) had died. The median duration of follow-up was 44.4 months (95% CI: 40.6-47.5). The median OS from diagnosis of metastatic disease was 30.9 months (95% CI: 26.7-34.5). The median OS from first crizotinib dose was 16.6 months (95% CI: 12.2-19.6) (Figure 2). The 6- and 12-month survival rates were 73.4% (95% CI: 68.5-78.3) and 56.2% (95% CI: 50.7-61.7), respectively. After adjusting for potential confounding factors, multivariable Cox regression (Table 2) revealed former- or never-smoker status on crizotinib initiation, adenocarcinoma histology, and PS 0-1 to be significantly associated with decreased risk of death. Median OS was significantly longer for patients with PS 0-1 than those with PS 2-4 (19.5 months [95% CI: 16.5-25.0] versus 4.5 months [95% CI: 3.0-7.3], log rank p <0.001). The line of crizotinib therapy did not impact OS (Table 2).
Figure 2

Overall survival from the first crizotinib dose

Table 2

Cox proportional hazard ratio analysis of overall survival from the first crizotinib dose

TestedReferenceUnivariable analysisMultivariable analysis
HR (95% CI)p valueHR (95% CI)p value
Age< median≥ median0.97 (0.74–1.27)0.81
GenderFemaleMale0.99 (0.75–1.29)0.93
Smoking statusNeverFormer/current0.79 (0.60–1.03)0.09(–)NS
Current smokerNoYes0.45 (0.30–0.69)<0.0010.44 (0.29–0.67)<0.001
HistologyAdenocarcinomaNon-adenocarcinoma0.64 (0.40–1.02)0.060.59 (0.36–0.97)0.04
PS0-12-40.36 (0.27–0.50)<0.0010.35 (0.26–0.48)<0.001
StageIIIIV0.84 (0.56–1.26)0.40
Brain metastasisNoYes0.95 (0.71–1.25)0.70
Number of treatment lines before crizotinib0-1≥20.79 (0.60–1.04)0.09(–)NS
Setting of administrationEMA approvalEAP0.86 (0.63–1.17)0.33

HR = hazard ratio; CI = confidence interval; PS = performance status; EMA = European Medicines Agency; EAP = expanded access program; NS = not significant.

HR = hazard ratio; CI = confidence interval; PS = performance status; EMA = European Medicines Agency; EAP = expanded access program; NS = not significant.

Effect on overall survival of systemic treatments following progression on crizotinib

Disease progression on crizotinib was documented in 284 patients. To avoid an immortal time bias and the inclusion in survival analysis of patient who could not receive subsequent treatments after crizotinib, the 21 patients who died under crizotinib were not considered for the survival analysis of systemic treatments following progression on crizotinib. Finally, a population of 263 with documented progressive disease was considered. The sites of progression are provided in Supplementary Table 1, including 99 cases (37.6%) of cerebral progression, regardless of the extra-cerebral status. There were 136 (51.7%) oligoprogressive diseases, 60 (44.1%) of which occurred in the brain. CBPD was documented in 86 patients (32.7%). The median duration of CBPD was 6.6 months (range: 0.7-35.2). The baseline characteristics and progression patterns of CBPD and non-CBPD patients are provided in Table 3. Patients under 65 years, with PFS on crizotinib ≥median, cerebral progression, and oligoprogression were more common in the CBPD population. This population was more commonly treated with next-generation ALKis following disease progression. The median OS from the first crizotinib dose was significantly longer in CBPD patients than in non-CBPDs (32.2 months [95% CI: 25.4-NR] versus 11.2 months [95% CI: 8.4-12.9]; log rank p <0.0001), as was median post-PD survival (18.7 months [95% CI: 15.1-26.9] versus 4.0 months [95% CI: 3.0-5.6]; log rank p <0.0001).
Table 3

Baseline and post-progression characteristics of the patients who continued crizotinib beyond progressive disease and those who did not

Characteristicsn (%)P-valuea
All patientsContinued CBPDDid not continue CBPD
(n=263)(n=86)(n=177)
Age, years
 Median (range)56.48 (19.2-88.4)54.83 (19.2-86.8)58.08 (25.2-88.4)0.10b
 <65194 (73.8)71 (83)123 (69.5)
 ≥6569 (26.2)15 (17)54 (30.5)0.02c
Gender
 Male136 (51.7)49 (57)87 (49.2)0.23c
 Female127 (48.3)37 (43)90 (50.8)
Ethnicity
 Non-Asian241 (91.6)79 (92)162 (91.5)0.28d
 Asian5 (1.9)3 (4)2 (1.1)
 MD17 (6.5)4 (6)13 (7.3)
Smoking status at baseline
 Current-smoker26 (10.0)4 (5)22 (12.7)0.09c
 Former-smoker88 (34.0)28 (33)60 (34.7)
 Never-smoker145 (56.0)54 (63)91 (52.6)
 MD404
Tumour histological type
 Adenocarcinoma241 (91.6)83 (96)158 (89.3)0.06d
 Non-adenocarcinomad22 (8.4)3 (4)19 (10.7)
 MD000
PS at baseline
 0-1192 (78.7)61 (80)131 (78.0)0.69c
 2-452 (21.3)15 (20)37 (22.0)
 MD19109
Stage at diagnosis
 I/II3 (1.1)2 (2)1 (0.6)0.16d
 Metastatic224 (85.2)75 (87)149 (84.2)
 Locally advanced36 (13.7)9 (11)27 (15.3)
 MD000
Brain metastasis at baseline
 Yes95 (36.1)31 (36)64 (36.2)0.99c
 No168 (63.9)55 (64)113 (63.8)
 MD000
Lines of therapy before crizotinib
 0-1157 (59.7)52 (60)105 (59.3)0.86c
 ≥2106 (40.3)34 (40)72 (40.7)
Cerebral progression
 Yes99 (37.6)48 (56)51 (28.8)<.001c
 No164 (62.4)38 (44)126 (71.2)
Oligoprogression
 Yes136 (51.7)61 (71)75 (42.4)<.001c
 No127 (48.3)25 (29)102 (57.6)
PFS with crizotinib
 ≥median126 (47.9)59 (69)67 (37.9)<.001c
 <median137 (52.1)27 (31)110 (62.1)
Subsequent treatment after progression on crizotinib
 Yes158 (60.1)50 (58)108 (61.0)0.65c
 No105 (39.9)36 (42)69 (39.0)
Next-generation ALKis after progression on crizotinib
 Yes84 (31.9)36 (41.9)48 (27.1)0.02c
 No105 (39.9)50 (58.1)129 (72.9)

CBPD = crizotinib beyond progressive disease; MD = missing data; PS = performance status; PFS = progression-free survival; ALKi = ALK inhibitor.

aContinued CBPD versus did not continue CBPD.

bStudent's t-test of comparison of the mean.

cChi-squared test of general association.

dFisher's exact test of general association when sample size requirement for chi-squared test was not matched.

eIncludes large-cell and other types of carcinoma.

CBPD = crizotinib beyond progressive disease; MD = missing data; PS = performance status; PFS = progression-free survival; ALKi = ALK inhibitor. aContinued CBPD versus did not continue CBPD. bStudent's t-test of comparison of the mean. cChi-squared test of general association. dFisher's exact test of general association when sample size requirement for chi-squared test was not matched. eIncludes large-cell and other types of carcinoma. The drugs administered as first-line and second-line post-crizotinib are shown in Table 4 (full details in Supplementary Table 2). The next-generation ALKis administered were ceritinib for 57 patients, alectinib for 19, ceritinib then alectinib for five, ceritinib then lorlatinib in one, and alectinib then ceritinib in two. Crizotinib was rechallenged in nine (3.4%). Chemotherapy was combined with ALKis in eight. Twenty patients received unmonitored subsequent systemic treatment after second-line post-PD: 10 in the group receiving next-generation ALKis and 10 in the group receiving subsequent drugs other than next-generation ALKi.
Table 4

Drugs used in first-line and second-line post-disease progression on crizotinib in patients receiving subsequent drugs other than next-generation ALKis and patients receiving next-generation ALKis

Drugs used (n)First-line post-PD on crizotinibSecond-line post-PD on crizotinib
No next-generation ALKis n=74Next-generation ALKis n=84No next-generation ALKis n=41Next-generation ALKis n=42
Chemotherapy (n, %)49 (66)12 (14)25 (61)14 (33)
 Platinum-based16353
 Pemetrexed-based20774
 Taxane-based184118
 Other7172
ALKi (n, %)10 (14)69 (82)11 (27)24 (57)
 Ceritinib_49_15
 Alectinib_19_7
 Lorlatinib___1
 Crizotinib7111_
 Crizotinib and anti-HSP9033_1
Chemotherapy and ALKis (n, %)7 (9)0 (0)2 (5)1 (3)
Others (n, %)8 (11)3 (4)3 (7)3 (7)
 Erlotinib4_3_
 Anti-HSP9033_1
 Pembrolizumab___2
 Anti-MET1___

PD = progressive disease; ALKi = ALK inhibitor.

PD = progressive disease; ALKi = ALK inhibitor. In order to analyse the effect different systemic treatments have on survival following progression on crizotinib, the patients were separated into three groups: best supportive care (BSC) only (n=105, 40%), subsequent drugs other than next-generation ALKis (n=74, 28.1%), and next-generation ALKis (n=84, 31.9%). The characteristics at baseline and time of disease progression are provided in Table 5. Patients receiving BSC only were older, had poorer PS, were heavily pretreated, and more frequently exhibited PFS on crizotinib Patients receiving next-generation ALKis were younger, more frequently exhibited PFS on crizotinib ≥median, more frequently received CBPD, and more frequently exhibited cerebral progression than patients receiving subsequent drugs other than next-generation ALKis.
Table 5

Characteristics at baseline and at time of progression on crizotinib, according to systemic treatment strategies after progression on crizotinib

Characteristicsn (%)P-valuen (%)P-value
Best supportive care onlySubsequent drugsSubsequent drugs other than next-generation ALKisNext-generation ALKis
(n=105)(n=158)(n=74)(n=84)
Baseline
Age ≥ 65 years36 (34.3)33 (20.9)0.02b21 (28)12 (14)0.03b
Gender, male53 (50.5)83 (52.5)0.74b40 (54)43 (51)0.72b
Smoking status0.12b0.73b
 Current-smoker15 (14.3)11 (7.1)6 (8)5 (6)
 Former-smoker31 (29.5)57 (37.0)28 (39)29 (35)
 Never-smoker59 (56.2)86 (55.9)38 (53)48 (59)
Non-adenocarcinoma histologyd12 (11.4)10 (6.3)0.14b8 (11)2 (2)0.05c
PS 2-437 (35.3)15 (9.5)<0.001b10 (14)5 (7)0.17b
Metastatic stage90 (85.7)134 (84.8)0.99c62 (84)72 (86)0.85c
Brain metastasis33 (31.4)62 (39.2)0.20b26 (35)36 (43)0.32b
PFS with crizotinib <median75 (71.4)62 (39.2)<0.001b40 (54)22 (26)<0.001b
≥2 lines before crizotinib52 (49.5)54 (34.2)0.01b27 (37)27 (32)0.57b
At time of progression on crizotinib
Cerebral progression38 (36.2)61 (38.6)0.69d20 (27)41 (49)0.005b
Oligoprogression57 (54.3)79 (50.0)0.50b38 (51)41 (49)0.75b
CBPD
 Yes36 (34.3)50 (31.6)0.65b14 (19)36 (43)0.001b
 Median duration (days)10179.50.36a44.5142.50.10a

ALKi = ALK inhibitor; PS = performance status; CBPD = crizotinib beyond progressive disease; PFS = progression-free survival.

aStudent's t-test of comparison of the mean.

bChi-squared test of general association.

cFisher's exact test of general association when sample size requirement for chi-squared test was not matched.

dIncludes large-cell and other types of carcinoma.

ALKi = ALK inhibitor; PS = performance status; CBPD = crizotinib beyond progressive disease; PFS = progression-free survival. aStudent's t-test of comparison of the mean. bChi-squared test of general association. cFisher's exact test of general association when sample size requirement for chi-squared test was not matched. dIncludes large-cell and other types of carcinoma. Median post-PD survival was 6.5 months (95% CI: 5.3-9.8). Multivariable Cox regression (Table 6) revealed that next-generation ALKis and CBPD were associated with improved survival from the first crizotinib dose, as well as improved post-PD survival, as were baseline PS 0-1, PFS with crizotinib ≥median, cerebral progression, and oligoprogression. Subsequent treatment other than next-generation ALKis did not improve survival. BSC only was associated with worse survival from the first crizotinib dose and worse post-PD survival.
Table 6

Cox multivariate analysis* of survival from the first crizotinib dose and post-progressive disease survival in the population of patients with documented progressive disease on crizotinib (n=263)

VariableTestedReferenceMultivariable analysis
Survival from the first crizotinib doseSurvival post-PD on crizotinib
HR (95% CI)p valueHR (95% CI)p value
PS0-12-40.49 (0.34–0.70)p<0.00010.43 (0.30–0.62)p<0.0001
PFS with crizotinib≥median<median0.28 (0.20–0.40)p<0.00010.68 (0.48–0.95)0.02
Cerebral progressionYesNo0.55 (0.39–0.77)0.00060.67 (0.49–0.94)0.02
OligoprogressionYesNo0.63 (0.46–0.87)0.0050.60 (0.44–0.83)0.002
Crizotinib beyond PDYesNo0.52 (0.35–0.77)0.0010.46 (0.31–0.68)p<0.0001
Systemic treatment after progression on crizotinib:
 BSC onlyYesNo2.06 (1.45–2.93)<0.00012.39 (1.67–3.42)<0.0001
Subsequent systemic treatment but no next- generation ALKisYesNo(–)NS(–)NS
 Next-generation ALKisYesNo0.34 (0.21–0.55)<0.00010.36 (0.23–0.57)<0.0001

PD = progressive disease; HR = hazard ratio; CI = confidence interval; PS = performance status; PFS = progression-free survival; BSC = best supportive care; ALKi = ALK inhibitor; NS = not significant.

*The full Cox univariate and multivariate proportional hazard ratio analysis is provided in Supplementary Table 3 and Supplementary Table 4.

PD = progressive disease; HR = hazard ratio; CI = confidence interval; PS = performance status; PFS = progression-free survival; BSC = best supportive care; ALKi = ALK inhibitor; NS = not significant. *The full Cox univariate and multivariate proportional hazard ratio analysis is provided in Supplementary Table 3 and Supplementary Table 4. For patients receiving next-generation ALKis, median OS from the first crizotinib dose was not reached (Figure 3A). The 1- and 3-year survival rates from the first crizotinib dose were 92.9% (95% CI: 87.3-98.4) and 59.2% (95% CI: 46.4-72.1), respectively. Post-PD survival was significantly longer for patients receiving next-generation ALKis than either those receiving subsequent drugs other than next-generation ALKis or those receiving BSC only (25.0 months [95% CI: 18.6-NR] versus 6.4 months [95% CI: 5.1-10.2] versus 1.5 [95% CI: 0.8-2.1], log rank p=0.0002) (Figure 3B).
Figure 3

Overall survival according to subsequent systemic treatments initiated after progression on crizotinib in patients with documented progressive disease on crizotinib (n=263)

A. Overall survival from the first crizotinib dose and B. survival post-progressive disease on crizotinib for the 84 patients receiving next-generation ALK inhibitors after progression on crizotinib, compared with the 74 patients receiving subsequent treatments other than next-generation ALK inhibitors and the 105 patients receiving best supportive care only. C. Overall survival from the diagnosis of metastatic disease in the 84 patients receiving next-generation ALK inhibitors after progression on crizotinib.

Overall survival according to subsequent systemic treatments initiated after progression on crizotinib in patients with documented progressive disease on crizotinib (n=263)

A. Overall survival from the first crizotinib dose and B. survival post-progressive disease on crizotinib for the 84 patients receiving next-generation ALK inhibitors after progression on crizotinib, compared with the 74 patients receiving subsequent treatments other than next-generation ALK inhibitors and the 105 patients receiving best supportive care only. C. Overall survival from the diagnosis of metastatic disease in the 84 patients receiving next-generation ALK inhibitors after progression on crizotinib. The median OS from diagnosis of metastatic disease was 89.6 months (95% CI: 53.5-not reached) for patients receiving next-generation ALKi and significantly longer than either those receiving subsequent drugs other than next-generation ALKi (28.2 months [95% CI: 22.1-33.0]) or those receiving BSC only (19.6 months [95% CI: 15.1-24.5]) (log rank P<0.001) (Figure 3C).

DISCUSSION

Our findings provide a robust OS estimation for patients receiving crizotinib for advanced ALK-positive NSCLC primarily pretreated with first-line platinum-based regimens. Additionally, our analysis of systemic treatments following disease progression on crizotinib suggests that next-generation ALKis substantially prolong survival after crizotinib failure in comparison with other treatment strategies. We report a median OS of 16.6 months after initiation of crizotinib, which is slightly shorter than the previous estimation of 21.7 months reported by the PROFILE 1007 trial evaluating crizotinib in the second-line setting. This could be the result of selecting patients in clinical trials compared to all-comer patients treated in daily practice. Our patients were older, less commonly women and non-smokers, with poorer PS than those enrolled in PROFILE 1007 [4]. In 40.9% of cases, patients received more than one systemic treatment before crizotinib and were less able to receive subsequent treatments, though the line of crizotinib treatment did not impact survival outcomes on crizotinib in our study. Almost all were of non-Asian ethnicity, compared to 54% of the patients in PROFILE 1007 [4]. A non-Asian ethnicity-related negative effect on outcome could not be excluded [23]. Current smoking at time of crizotinib initiation had a strong negative effect on survival outcomes. ALK rearrangement is detected in higher proportions in non-smokers and former smokers [1]. Very few current smokers were enrolled in clinical trials with crizotinib, meaning little is known about crizotinib efficacy in this patient subset [3, 4]. The current-smoker population could consist of those with very poor prognosis and a specific biological pattern, explaining the lack of efficacy of crizotinib. Furthermore, cigarette smoking induces cytochromes CYP1A1/1A2 and is hypothesized to alter anti-EGFR erlotinib pharmacokinetics, resulting in worse clinical outcomes [24, 25]. Crizotinib elimination via CYP1A1/1A2 has not been reported, yet our data suggests cigarette smoking has a potential impact on its pharmacokinetics [26, 27]. Nevertheless, only 29 patients were current smokers at time of crizotinib initiation in our study. Our results warrant validation in a larger cohort. On the other hand, PS 2-4 at time of crizotinib initiation was associated with worse survival with crizotinib and after disease progression. This suggests that ALKis should be given to ALK-positive patients as soon as possible in the disease course. CBPD was associated with remarkably similar survival outcomes to those previously reported by Ou et al. [9]. CLINALK and Ou et al. studies reported median OS with crizotinib of 32.2 and 29.6 months in the CBPD population and 11.2 and 10.8 months in non-CBPD, respectively [9]. The similar survival benefit we observed with CBPD in two independent cohorts, and persistence of this benefit following adjustment for the different systemic treatment strategies initiated after disease progression on crizotinib, confirm the validity of this approach, previously legitimised by the lack of effective and well-tolerated drugs available for strategies following crizotinib failure. Next-generation ALKis have emerged as the preferred treatment in this setting due to their ability to overcome crizotinib resistance. In our study, they deeply impacted survival outcomes when given after disease progression on crizotinib, whereas other systemic treatments did not and, as expected, BSC only was associated with worse survival. Given its retrospective nature, this survival analysis had several limitations. We included patients receiving crizotinib at different times in their disease course, in second- or third-line in 72.7% of the cases. The survival analysis focused on three non-randomized and unmatched groups of patients according to systemic treatment received after disease progression on crizotinib. As a result, the characteristics of these three groups are partially imbalanced, with biases in patient selection potentially causing the improved survival observed in those receiving CBPD or next-generation ALKis. Alternatively, this could also be due to specific tumour biology and high sensitivity to ALK inhibition, rather than a direct effect of treatment strategies. Patients received next-generation ALKis as clinical trial participants, all with good prognosis. Finally, locally-ablative treatments in cases of oligoprogressive disease were not recorded, potentially causing a partial bias in our results. Nevertheless, we provide an estimation of survival benefit with next-generation ALKis adjusted for potential confounding factors, including patterns of progression on crizotinib and CBPD, compared to a population treated with systemic treatments other than next-generation ALKis or BSC only. A recently published retrospective analysis of 73 patients treated with crizotinib then ceritinib reported a 49.4-month OS from diagnosis of metastatic disease, though did not provide a comparator population [20]. Two smaller studies with 11 and 13 patients treated with crizotinib then reported good survival outcomes [21, 22]. In our study, the 84 patients receiving next-generation ALKis after crizotinib achieved an 89.6-month OS from diagnosis of metastatic disease, with a 59.2% 3-year survival from the first crizotinib dose and median post-PD survival of 25.0 months. The survival rates reported here in a large population treated with crizotinib then next-generation ALKis could represent an interesting benchmark for ongoing clinical trials assessing how best to sequence the available ALKis. The ALEX trial (NCT02075840) is comparing crizotinib and alectinib in first-line setting with no crossover at time of progression. In contrast, the NCI ALK Master Protocol (NCT02465060) will compare in first-line a standard treatment arm with crizotinib to several next-generation ALKis and evaluate different sequential strategies by incorporating systematic crossover in each treatment arm. In conclusion, the prolonged survival observed in crizotinib clinical trials in ALK-positive NSCLC can also be observed in less selective patient populations treated in routine practice. The remarkable median survival from diagnosis of metastatic disease of 89.6 months reported in patients treated with next-generation ALKis after crizotinib emphasizes the importance of accelerated access to diagnostic tools and targeted therapy in molecularly-defined populations. While this study was unable to resolve the question of how best to sequence ALKis, it could provide a rationale that supports the use of sequential ALKis rather than non-targeted treatment after crizotinib failure, along with offering an historical benchmark for the ongoing clinical trials in this setting.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Study population and procedures

This retrospective study included only patients with diagnosis of ALK-rearranged NSCLC determined by fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH, performed on a routine basis at certified molecular genetics French National Cancer Institute [INCa] platforms using a certified break-apart FISH assay), with advanced/metastatic NSCLC, aged ≥18 years, not enrolled in a crizotinib trial, having received at least 7 days of crizotinib treatment. All received 250mg oral crizotinib twice daily at initiation. The French crizotinib expanded access program (EAP) enrolled 313 patients exhibiting any ALK-positive tumours from November 18th 2010 to October 23th 2012. The EAP database was provided by Pfizer. Of the 117 identified investigational centres, 80 agreed to participate. After EAP discontinuation, we enrolled patients receiving second-line crizotinib as approved drug until December 31th 2013 at participating centres. Data and survival follow-up were extracted from medical records by investigators in each centre and documented in a standard case report form. Database is held by the French Collaborative Thoracic Intergroup (IFCT) that ensured the quality of the data collected by monitoring the centres via periodic visits of IFCT clinical research associates. Medical monitoring was performed by two co-authors (MD, DMS). The source documents proving the collected data's integrity are filed at the investigational centre.

Definitions and study endpoints

The sites where PD manifested were reported. Oligoprogressive disease was defined as progression in only one site. CBPD was defined as continuing crizotinib for over 21 days following RECIST-defined PD and best response to crizotinib other than PD. First-line and second-line drugs following crizotinib failure and corresponding response according to RECIST 1.1. were monitored. Crizotinib rechallenge was defined as crizotinib initiation following at least one systemic therapy following PD under crizotinib [28]. The primary end-point was OS measured from the date of first crizotinib dose. Secondary endpoints included: objective response rate (ORR) according to RECIST 1.1, evaluated by investigators; disease control rate (DCR); PFS, according to RECIST 1.1.; OS from PD under crizotinib (post-PD survival); OS from diagnosis of metastatic disease.

Study oversight

This non-interventional study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and Good Clinical Practice guidelines, approved by a national ethics committee, French Advisory Committee on Information Processing in Material Research in the Field of Health, and France's national data protection authority (CNIL). All participating departments approved the study protocol. All included patients still alive received information from their referring physician.

Statistical analysis

Variable characteristics were compared with the chi-squared or Fisher's exact tests for qualitative variables and Student's t-test or ANOVA for quantitative variables. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate all OS endpoints. We estimated hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) using a Cox model. Univariate Cox models were applied to select the most promising prognostic variables (threshold p=0.20). A multivariate Cox model was then applied using a backwards procedure to adjust for potential confounders. OS was defined as the date of first crizotinib dose to death or final follow-up. Post-PD survival was defined as the date of RECIST-defined PD under crizotinib to death or final follow-up. The cut-off for survival analysis was July 31st 2015. All statistical tests were two-sided, and a p value <0.05 was deemed statistically significant. All analyses were performed using SAS software, Version 9.3 (SAS Institute). We wish to thank the following individuals for their participation in data collection, monitoring, and computing: S Dos Santos and A Lejeune (Intergroupe Francophone de Cancérologie Thoracique, Paris, France).
  27 in total

Review 1.  Drug rechallenge and treatment beyond progression--implications for drug resistance.

Authors:  Elizabeth A Kuczynski; Daniel J Sargent; Axel Grothey; Robert S Kerbel
Journal:  Nat Rev Clin Oncol       Date:  2013-09-03       Impact factor: 66.675

2.  Safety and activity of alectinib against systemic disease and brain metastases in patients with crizotinib-resistant ALK-rearranged non-small-cell lung cancer (AF-002JG): results from the dose-finding portion of a phase 1/2 study.

Authors:  Shirish M Gadgeel; Leena Gandhi; Gregory J Riely; Alberto A Chiappori; Howard L West; Michele C Azada; Peter N Morcos; Ruey-Min Lee; Linta Garcia; Li Yu; Frederic Boisserie; Laura Di Laurenzio; Sophie Golding; Jotaro Sato; Shumpei Yokoyama; Tomohiro Tanaka; Sai-Hong Ignatius Ou
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2014-08-18       Impact factor: 41.316

3.  Clinical response to crizotinib retreatment after acquisition of drug resistance.

Authors:  Hiromichi Matsuoka; Takayasu Kurata; Isamu Okamoto; Hiroyasu Kaneda; Kaoru Tanaka; Kazuhiko Nakagawa
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2013-05-28       Impact factor: 44.544

4.  Response to crizotinib rechallenge after initial progression and intervening chemotherapy in ALK lung cancer.

Authors:  Eiko Theodora Browning; Andrew James Weickhardt; D Ross Camidge
Journal:  J Thorac Oncol       Date:  2013-03       Impact factor: 15.609

Review 5.  Pharmacokinetics of crizotinib in NSCLC patients.

Authors:  Gerhard Hamilton; Barbara Rath; Otto Burghuber
Journal:  Expert Opin Drug Metab Toxicol       Date:  2015-03-03       Impact factor: 4.481

6.  First-line crizotinib versus chemotherapy in ALK-positive lung cancer.

Authors:  Benjamin J Solomon; Tony Mok; Dong-Wan Kim; Yi-Long Wu; Kazuhiko Nakagawa; Tarek Mekhail; Enriqueta Felip; Federico Cappuzzo; Jolanda Paolini; Tiziana Usari; Shrividya Iyer; Arlene Reisman; Keith D Wilner; Jennifer Tursi; Fiona Blackhall
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2014-12-04       Impact factor: 91.245

7.  Stereotactic radiation therapy can safely and durably control sites of extra-central nervous system oligoprogressive disease in anaplastic lymphoma kinase-positive lung cancer patients receiving crizotinib.

Authors:  Gregory N Gan; Andrew J Weickhardt; Benjamin Scheier; Robert C Doebele; Laurie E Gaspar; Brian D Kavanagh; D Ross Camidge
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2014-01-22       Impact factor: 7.038

8.  Local ablative therapy of oligoprogressive disease prolongs disease control by tyrosine kinase inhibitors in oncogene-addicted non-small-cell lung cancer.

Authors:  Andrew J Weickhardt; Benjamin Scheier; Joseph Malachy Burke; Gregory Gan; Xian Lu; Paul A Bunn; Dara L Aisner; Laurie E Gaspar; Brian D Kavanagh; Robert C Doebele; D Ross Camidge
Journal:  J Thorac Oncol       Date:  2012-12       Impact factor: 15.609

9.  Alectinib in Crizotinib-Refractory ALK-Rearranged Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: A Phase II Global Study.

Authors:  Sai-Hong Ignatius Ou; Jin Seok Ahn; Luigi De Petris; Ramaswamy Govindan; James Chih-Hsin Yang; Brett Hughes; Hervé Lena; Denis Moro-Sibilot; Alessandra Bearz; Santiago Viteri Ramirez; Tarek Mekhail; Alexander Spira; Walter Bordogna; Bogdana Balas; Peter N Morcos; Annabelle Monnet; Ali Zeaiter; Dong-Wan Kim
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2015-11-23       Impact factor: 44.544

10.  Alectinib in ALK-positive, crizotinib-resistant, non-small-cell lung cancer: a single-group, multicentre, phase 2 trial.

Authors:  Alice T Shaw; Leena Gandhi; Shirish Gadgeel; Gregory J Riely; Jeremy Cetnar; Howard West; D Ross Camidge; Mark A Socinski; Alberto Chiappori; Tarek Mekhail; Bo H Chao; Hossein Borghaei; Kathryn A Gold; Ali Zeaiter; Walter Bordogna; Bogdana Balas; Oscar Puig; Volkmar Henschel; Sai-Hong Ignatius Ou
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2015-12-19       Impact factor: 41.316

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  56 in total

1.  ALK-Rearranged Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer in 2020: Real-World Triumphs in an Era of Multigeneration ALK-Inhibitor Sequencing Informed by Drug Resistance Profiling.

Authors:  Malinda Itchins; Brandon Lau; Amanda L Hudson; Helen Westman; Cathy Yi Xia; Sarah A Hayes; Viive M Howell; Michael Rodriguez; Wendy A Cooper; Heng Wei; Michael Buckland; Bob T Li; Mark Li; Vivek Rathi; Stephen B Fox; Anthony J Gill; Stephen J Clarke; Michael J Boyer; Nick Pavlakis
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2020-07-02

2.  Lorlatinib in ALK- and ROS1-positive NSCLC: the future has a start.

Authors:  Francesco Facchinetti; Luc Friboulet
Journal:  Transl Lung Cancer Res       Date:  2018-04

3.  Hunting for transcription factors: STAT3 decoy in non-small cell lung cancer.

Authors:  Joseph Carmicheal; Sukhwinder Kaur; Surinder K Batra; Apar Kishor Ganti
Journal:  Transl Lung Cancer Res       Date:  2018-09

4.  EML4-ALK V3, treatment resistance, and survival: refining the diagnosis of ALK+ NSCLC.

Authors:  Petros Christopoulos; Martina Kirchner; Volker Endris; Albrecht Stenzinger; Michael Thomas
Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2018-06       Impact factor: 2.895

Review 5.  Lung Cancers: Molecular Characterization, Clonal Heterogeneity and Evolution, and Cancer Stem Cells.

Authors:  Ugo Testa; Germana Castelli; Elvira Pelosi
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2018-07-27       Impact factor: 6.639

6.  Lorlatinib: an additional option for ALK-positive non-small cell lung cancer?

Authors:  Alice Mogenet; Pascale Tomasini; Laurent Greillier; Fabrice Barlesi
Journal:  Transl Lung Cancer Res       Date:  2019-12

Review 7.  Diagnosis and Treatment of ALK Aberrations in Metastatic NSCLC.

Authors:  Alex Friedlaender; Giuseppe Banna; Sandip Patel; Alfredo Addeo
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Oncol       Date:  2019-09-04

Review 8.  Management of Resistance to First-Line Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor Therapy.

Authors:  Solange Peters; Stefan Zimmermann
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Oncol       Date:  2018-05-28

9.  Transcriptomics-Guided Personalized Prescription of Targeted Therapeutics for Metastatic ALK-Positive Lung Cancer Case Following Recurrence on ALK Inhibitors.

Authors:  Elena Poddubskaya; Alexey Bondarenko; Alexander Boroda; Evgenia Zotova; Alex Glusker; Svetlana Sletina; Luidmila Makovskaia; Philipp Kopylov; Marina Sekacheva; Alexey Moisseev; Madina Baranova
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2019-10-15       Impact factor: 6.244

10.  ERCC1 assessment in upfront treatment with and without cisplatin-based chemotherapy in stage IIIB/IV non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer.

Authors:  Matthias Villalobos; Piotr Czapiewski; Niels Reinmuth; Jürgen R Fischer; Stefan Andreas; Cornelius Kortsik; Monika Serke; Martin Wolf; Petra Neuser; Alexander Reuss; Philipp A Schnabel; Michael Thomas
Journal:  Med Oncol       Date:  2018-06-15       Impact factor: 3.064

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