| Literature DB >> 29075144 |
Abstract
In the last decade, there have been major therapeutic advances in the management of patients with anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)-positive non-small cell lung cancer. Crizotinib was the first approved ALK inhibitor with significant benefits over chemotherapy. However, patients inevitably develop disease progression especially in central nervous system and acquire resistance to crizotinib. Several next-generation ALK inhibitors have been developed to overcome these resistance mechanisms and have demonstrated clinical benefits in crizotinib-refractory non-small cell lung cancer including in central nervous system. Brigatinib is a second-generation ALK inhibitor with high level of activity against ALK and several other targets. It is active in vitro against many ALK kinase domain mutations including L1196M, E1210K, and G1202R which may mediate acquired resistance to other ALK inhibitors. In Phase I/II and ALTA clinical studies, brigatinib has demonstrated substantial and durable responses and intracranial responses after progression on crizotinib. It has acceptable safety profile, but early pulmonary toxicity has been observed prompting to pursue daily dosing of 180 mg (with lead-in). Overall, 180 mg (with lead-in) has showed consistently better efficacy than 90 mg. In this review, we will discuss in detail these two pivotal trials that led to the accelerated approval for brigatinib and its future directions.Entities:
Keywords: ALK rearrangement; alectinib; brigatinib; ceritinib; crizotinib; non-small cell lung cancer
Year: 2017 PMID: 29075144 PMCID: PMC5648304 DOI: 10.2147/LCTT.S126507
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lung Cancer (Auckl) ISSN: 1179-2728
Summarizing the clinical outcomes and AEs of brigatinib in patients with advanced ALK-positive NSCLC
| Trial | N | Dose | Prior treatment | ORR | mPFS (months) | iORR | Common AEs | Common G 3–4 AEs | Serious AEs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase I/II | 71 | 30–300 mg once daily | Prior CRZ and CT | 72% | 13.2 | 53% | Nausea (53%), fatigue (43%), diarrhea (41%) | ↑ Lipase (9%), dyspnea (6%), hypertension (5%) | Dyspnea (7%), pneumonia (7%), hypoxia (5%) |
| ALTA (Phase II) | Arm A/B: 112/110 | 90 mg/180 mg once daily (with lead-in) | Prior CRZ and CT | 45%/54% | 9.2/12.9 | 42%/67% | Nausea (33%/40%), diarrhea (19%/38%), headache (28%/27%), cough (18%/34%) | ↑ CPK (3%/9%), hypertension (6%/6%), pneumonia (3%/5%) | − |
Notes: ↑represented as increase; “–” represented as no data.
Abbreviations: AEs, adverse events; ALK, anaplastic lymphoma kinase; CPK, creatinine phosphokinase; CRZ, crizotinib; CT, chemotherapy; mPFS, median progression-free survival; N, number of patients; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; iORR, intracranial objective response rate; ORR, objective response rate.