| Literature DB >> 31165040 |
Miren Taberna1,2, Marc Oliva3, Ricard Mesía4.
Abstract
Cetuximab remains to date the only targeted therapy approved for the treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). The EGFR pathway plays a key role in the tumorigenesis and progression of this disease as well as in the resistance to radiotherapy (RT). While several anti-EGFR agents have been tested in HNSCC, cetuximab, an IgG1 subclass monoclonal antibody against EGFR, is the only drug with proven efficacy for the treatment of both locoregionally-advanced (LA) and recurrent/metastatic (R/M) disease. The addition of cetuximab to radiotherapy is a validated treatment option in LA-HNSCC. However, its use has been limited to patients who are considered unfit for standard of care chemoradiotherapy (CRT) with single agent cisplatin given the lack of direct comparison of these two regimens in randomized phase III trials and the inferiority suggested by metanalysis and phase II studies. The current use of cetuximab in HNSCC is about to change given the recent results from randomized prospective clinical trials in both the LA and R/M setting. Two phase III studies evaluating RT-cetuximab vs. CRT in Human Papillomavirus (HPV)-positive LA oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (De-ESCALaTE and RTOG 1016) showed inferior overall survival and progression-free survival for RT-cetuximab combination, and therefore CRT with cisplatin remains the standard of care in this disease. In the R/M HNSCC, the EXTREME regimen has been the standard of care as first-line treatment for the past 10 years. However, the results from the KEYNOTE-048 study will likely position the anti-PD-1 agent pembrolizumab as the new first line treatment either alone or in combination with chemotherapy in this setting based on PD-L1 status. Interestingly, cetuximab-mediated immunogenicity through antibody dependent cell cytotoxicity (ADCC) has encouraged the evaluation of combined approaches with immune-checkpoint inhibitors in both LA and R/M-HNSCC settings. This article reviews the accumulated evidence on the role of cetuximab in HNSCC in the past decade, offering an overview of its current impact in the treatment of LA and R/M-HNSCC disease and its potential use in the era of immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: HPV-positive head and neck cancer; anti-EGFR therapy; cetuximab; head and neck cancer; head and neck cancer treatment; head and neck squamous cell carcinoma
Year: 2019 PMID: 31165040 PMCID: PMC6536039 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.00383
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Main clinical trials evaluating the efficacy of new schemes of treatments compared with the EXTREME regimen.
Main de-escalation clinical trials ongoing evaluating cetuximab in combination with RT for HPV-related OPSCC.
| Cetuximab with IMRT radiation | US | RTOG 1016 | Phase III | 987 | p16INK4a IHC | OS (non-inferiority) | Cisplatin day 1 and 22 |
| Australia | TROG 1201 | Phase III | 189 | p16INK4a IHC | Symptom severity | Weekly cisplatin | |
| UK | De-ESCALaTE | Phase III | 334 | p16INK4a IHC | Overall severe (acute and late) toxicity (Grade 3–5) | Cisplatin day 1, 22, and 43 |
Summarized of clinical data investigating anti-EGFR therapy on HPV-positive HNSCC.
| Vermorken et al. ( | Cisplatin and fluorouracil ± panitumumab | Prospective | Addition of panitumumab to cisplatin-based chemotherapy significantly improves OS and PFS only in HPV negative HNSCC patients |
| Vermorken et al. ( | Cisplatin and fluorouracil ± cetuximab | Retrospective | Survival benefit of adding cetuximab to platinum-based chemotherapy was independent of p16 status |
| Fayette et al. ( | Cetuximab vs. cetuximab- duligotuzumab. | Prospective | HPV-negative HNSCC but not HPV-positive are most likely to respond to EGFR blockage by cetuximab or duligotuzumab. |
| Seiwert et al. ( | Afatinib vs. cetuximab | Prospective | HPV positive HNSCC patients had a lower response rate to EGFR inhibitors compared with HPV negative patients |
| Pajares et al. ( | Cisplatin-RT vs. cetuximab-RT | Retrospective series | p16-positive patients may benefit more from RT combined with EGFR inhibitors than with cisplatin |
| Koutcher et al. ( | Cisplatin-RT vs. cetuximab-RT | Retrospective series | Treatment with cisplatin not cetuximab predict for better OS, FFS and locoregional control |
| Ang et al. ( | Cisplatin ± cetuximab with AFX RT | Prospective | The addition of cetuximab produce no benefit in PFS or OS in patient with p16 positive or negative HNSCC |
| Rosenthal et al. ( | RT vs. cetuximab-RT | Retrospective | Better outcomes in both groups p16-positive and p16-negative when treated with cetuximab and RT in comparison with RT alone |
| Mesía et al. ( | Cisplatin-RDT ± panitumumab | Prospective | No benefit was noted with the addition of panitumumab in either PFS or OS in the patients with p16-postive tumors |
| Giralt et al. ( | Panitumumab-RT vs. cisplatin-RT | Prospective | Better outcomes for cisplatin-RT (few p16 positive patients included) |
| Ou et al. ( | Cisplatin-RT vs. cetuximab-RT | Restrospective series | Better outcomes in patients receiving concurrent cisplatin over cetuximab regardless of HPV/p16 status |
| Mena et al. ( | Cisplatin-RT vs. cetuximab-RT vs. surgery/RT vs. ICT/RT | Retrospective series | Improved OS for all treatment schemes with the exception of those who underwent cetuximab-RT |
AFX RT, Accelerated fractionation radiotherapy; HNSCC, Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; FFS, failure free survival; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression free survival; RT, radiotherapy.
Main clinical trials evaluating cetuximab combinations with ICI in HNSCC.
| NCT02999087 | 688 | Experimental arm: Avelumab + cetuximab + IMRT | Phase III/recruiting | Comparative arm: standard CRT with high dose cisplatin D1,22,43 |
| NCT03349710 | 1046 | Cohort 1: | Phase III/recruiting | Comparative double-blind, placebo-controlled, Phase 3 study. The study includes a 2nd cohort (cohort 2) with experimental arms C and D involving cisplatin + nivolumab/placebo |
| NCT03051906 | 69 | Experimental arm: Cetuximab + durvalumab + IMRT followed by mainteinance durvalumab | Phase II/III/active, pending recruitment | Excludes oral cavity and HPV-positive oropharynx when T1-2, N0-N2a (AJCC, 7th ed.) or any T, any N with smoking history of <10 pack/years |
| NCT0193592 | 18 | Experimental arm: Ipilimumab ± Cetuximab ± IMRT | Phase Ib/active, finished recruitment | Safety data presented at ESMO 2016 ( |
| NCT02643550 | 100 | Experimental arm: Monalizumab + cetuximab | Phase Ib-II | One arm for patients with prior exposure to PD-(L)1 ICI |
| EACH NCT03493322 | 130 | Experimental arm: Avelumab + cetuximab Experimental arm: avelumab monotherapy | Phase II | |
| NCT03498378 | 24 | Experimental arm: Avelumab + cetuximab + palbociclib | Phase I | |
| NCT00397384 | 83 | Experimental arm: Pembrolizumab + cetuximab | Phase II | Four arms: cetuximab-naive, PD-(L)1-refractary-cetuximab-naive, PD-(L)1-refractary-cetuximab-refreactary and cutaneous HNSCC. |
| NCT01836029 | 175 | Comparator arm: | Phase II | Randomized |