| Literature DB >> 29448944 |
Abstract
The therapeutic approach for the second-line treatment of patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) without actionable mutations has been revolutionized by the recent approval of new effective drugs with various mechanisms of action, including nintedanib, ramucirumab, nivolumab, pembrolizumab, atezolizumab, and afatinib. The recent network meta-analysis of Créquit et al. (BMC Medicine, 15:193, 2017) compared the effectiveness and tolerability of the second-line treatments for advanced NSCLC with wild-type or unknown status for EGFR. The authors found that immunotherapy might be more efficacious than the currently recommended treatments. However, their meta-analysis does not take into account the role of predictive biomarkers - this is indeed a crucial point in the decision-making process considering that only a fraction of advanced NSCLC patients might derive a long-term benefit from second-line immunotherapy. The identification of molecular biomarkers that can predict a response to immune checkpoints, angiogenesis, and EGFR inhibitors remains an important goal of clinical research in order to maximize the benefit of these agents and to aid clinicians in the decision-making process.Please see related article: https://bmcmedicine.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12916-017-0954-x.Entities:
Keywords: Afatinib; Atezolizumab; Docetaxel; Erlotinib; NSCLC; Nintedanib; Nivolumab; Pembrolizumab; Pemetrexed; Ramucirumab; Second-line therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29448944 PMCID: PMC5815183 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-018-1011-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
New approved drugs for the second-line treatment of patients with advanced NSCLC
| Reference | Patients | Histotype | Regimen | Response | Progression-free survival, months | Median overall survival, months |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reck et al. [ | 658 | Adenocarcinoma | Docetaxel + nintedanib vs. docetaxel + placebo | 4.7% vs. 3.6% | 4.0 vs. 2.8 | 12.6 vs. 10.3 | 0.0359 |
| Garon et al. [ | 1253 | All histologies | Docetaxel + ramucirumab vs. docetaxel + placebo | 23% vs. 14% | 4.5 vs. 3.0 | 10.5 vs. 9.1 | 0.023 |
| Brahmer et al [ | 272 | Squamous | Nivolumab vs. docetaxel | 20% vs. 9% | 3.5 vs. 2.8 | 9.2 vs. 6.0 | <0.001 |
| Borghaei et al. [ | 582 | Adenocarcinoma | Nivolumab vs. docetaxel | 19% vs. 12% | 2.3 vs. 4.2 | 12.2 vs. 9.4 | 0.002 |
| Herbst et al. [ | 1034 | All histologies | Pembrolizumab 2 mg/kg vs. pembrolizumab 10 mg/kg vs. docetaxel | 18% vs. 18% vs. 9% | 3.9 vs. 4.0 vs. 4.0 | 10.4 vs. 12.7 vs. 8.5 | 0.0008 |
| Rittmeyer et al. [ | 287 | All histologies | Atezolizumab vs. docetaxel | 14% vs. 13% | 2.8 vs. 4.0 | 13.8 vs. 9.6 | 0.0003 |
| Soria et al. [ | 795 | Squamous | Afatinib vs. erlotinib | 6% vs. 3% | 2.6 vs. 1.9 | 7.9 vs. 6.8 | 0.0077 |
Fig. 1Therapeutic scenario for patients with advanced non-squamous ‘undruggable’ NSCLC (EGFR wild type, ALK and ROS1 non-rearranged, PD-L1 < 50%)
Fig. 2Therapeutic scenario for patients with advanced squamous ‘undruggable’ NSCLC (PD-L1 < 50%)