| Literature DB >> 34425853 |
Leylah M Drusbosky1, Richa Dawar2, Estelamari Rodriguez2, Chukwuemeka V Ikpeazu3,4.
Abstract
METex14 skipping mutations occur in about 3-4% of lung adenocarcinoma patients and 1-2% of patients with other lung cancer histology. The MET receptor tyrosine kinase and its ligand hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) are established oncogenic drivers of NSCLC. A mutation that results in loss of exon 14 in the MET gene leads to dysregulation and inappropriate signaling that is associated with increased responsiveness to MET TKIs. Results from GEOMETRY mono-1 and VISION Phase I/II clinical trials demonstrated significant clinical activity in patients treated with the MET Exon 14 skipping mutation inhibitors capmatinib and tepotinib with tolerable toxicity profile. In the GEOMETRY mono-1 trial, capmatinib was especially active in treatment-naïve patients supporting the upfront testing of this oncogenic driver. Tepotinib demonstrated superior activity in the pretreated patients in the VISION trial. Savolitinib is another MET TKI that has shown efficacy in the first- and second-line settings, including patients with aggressive pulmonary sarcomatoid carcinoma. These studies have demonstrated that these TKIs can cross the blood brain barrier and demonstrated some activity toward CNS metastases. MET Exon 14 skipping mutation is detected by NGS-based testing of liquid or tissue biopsies, with preference for RNA-based NGS. The activity of capmatinib and tepotinib is limited by the development of acquired resistance. Current research is focused on strategies to overcome resistance and improve the effectiveness of these agents. Our aim is to review the current status of MET Exon 14 skipping mutation as it pertains NSCLC.Entities:
Keywords: MET Exon 14 skipping (METex14); Metastasis; NSCLC; Tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34425853 PMCID: PMC8381548 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-021-01138-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1Schematic representation of the HGF/MET signaling pathway [13]. The binding of HGF to MET induces conformational changes, receptor dimerization, trans-phosphorylation of tyrosine residues in the catalytic domain of MET, and phosphorylation of tyrosine residues in the carboxyl-terminal tail. The phosphorylated tyrosine residues create docking sites for several adaptor molecules and kinase substrates. MET activation results in subsequent activation of signaling pathways that include ERK/MAPK, PI3K/AKT and STAT3, which mediate MET-dependent cell proliferation, survival, migration, and invasion. Capmatinib, tepotinib, and savolitinib block the phosphorylation of tyrosine residues
Efficacy of capmatinib in GEOMETRY mono-1
| Previously treated patients ( | |
| ORR (%) | 41 (95% CI: 29–53) |
| Medium DOR (months) | 9.7 (95% CI: 5.6–13.0) |
| Medium PFS (months) | 5.4 (95% CI: 5.4–7.0) |
| Treatment-naïve patients ( | |
| ORR (%) | 68 (95% CI: 48–84) |
| Medium DOR (months) | 12.6 (95% CI: 5.6–NE) |
| Medium PFS (months) | 12.4 (95% CI: 8.2–NE) |
| Patients with measurable CNS metastasis ( | |
| CR (%) | 31 |
| PR (%) | 23 |
NE denotes not evaluable; ORR denotes objective response rate; DOR denotes duration of response; PFS denotes progression-free survival
Capmatinib safety overview NSCLC with METex14 skipping mutation (GEOMETRY mono-1)
| Adverse events | Cohort 4 ( | Cohort 5b ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Grade 3 or 4 | Total | Grade 3 or 4 | |
| Any event-no (%) | 68 (99) | 52 (75) | 28 (100) | 21 (75) |
| Peripheral edema | 37 (54) | 10 (14) | 21 (75) | 3 (11) |
| Nausea | 31 (46) | 0 | 13 (46) | 0 |
| Vomiting | 18 (26) | 0 | 7 (25) | 0 |
| Creatinine increased | 23 (33) | 0 | 10 (36) | 0 |
| Dyspnea | 19 (28) | 7 (10) | 6 (21) | 2 (7) |
| fatigue | 18 (26) | 6 (9) | 4 (14) | 1 (4) |
| Decreased appetite | 15 (22) | 1 (1) | 8 (29) | 0 |
| Constipation | 10 (14) | 2 (3) | 4 (14) | 0 |
| Diarrhea | 12 (17) | 0 | 5 (18) | 0 |
| Cough | 10 (14) | 1 (1) | 7 (25) | 0 |
| Back pain | 11 (16) | 2 (3) | 4 (14) | 0 |
| Pyrexia | 9 (13) | 1 (1) | 2 (7) | 0 |
| ALT increased | 8 (12) | 6 (9) | 4 (14) | 2 (7) |
| Asthenia | 6 (9) | 3 (4) | 4 (14) | 2 (7) |
| Pneumonia | 7 (10) | 4 (6) | 2 (7) | 0 |
| Weight loss | 9 (13) | 0 | 3 (11) | 0 |
| Non-cardiac chest pain | 5 (7) | 1 (1) | 1 (4) | 0 |
| Serious AE | 36 (52) | 30 (43) | 14 (50) | 12 (43) |
| Event leading to discontinuation | 14 (20) | 8 (12) | 6 (21) | 5 (18) |
Cohort 4 are patients who had received one or two lines of therapy previously and cohort 5b are patients who had not received treatment previously. ALT denotes alanine aminotransferase (30)
Efficacy of Tepotinib in VISION trial
| Patients with METex14 skipping mutation (efficacy population: | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Liquid biopsy ( | Tissue biopsy ( | Combined biopsy ( | |
| ORR (%) | 48 (95% CI: 36–61) | 50 (95% CI: 37–63) | 46 (95% CI: 36–57) |
| Medium DOR (mo) | 9.9 (95% CI: 72–NE) | 15.7 (95% CI: 9.7–NE) | 11 (95% CI: 7.2–NE) |
| Medium PFS (mo) | 8.5 (95% CI: 5.1–11.0) | 11.0 (95% CI: 5.7–17.1) | 8.5 (95% CI: 6.7–11.0) |
NE denotes no evaluable; ORR denotes objective response rate; DOR denotes duration of response; PFS denotes progression-free survival
Tepotinib safety overview in NSCLC patients with METex14 skipping mutation (VISION Tepotinib trial)
| Adverse events- | All grades | Grade 1 or 2 | Grade 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Any | 135 (89) | 93 (61) | 38 (25) |
| Peripheral edema | 96 (63) | 85 (56) | 11 (7) |
| Nausea | 39 (63) | 38 (25) | 1 (1) |
| Diarrhea | 33 (22) | 32 (21) | 1 (1) |
| Creatinine increased | 27 (18) | 26 (17) | 1 (1) |
| Hypoalbuminemia | 24 (16) | 21 (14) | 3 (2) |
| Amylase increased | 17 (11) | 13 (9) | 3 (2) |
| Lipase increased | 13 (9) | 9 (6) | 4 (3) |
| Asthenia | 12 (8) | 11 (7) | 1 (1) |
| Decreased appetite | 12 (8) | 11 (7) | 1 (1) |
| Pleural effusion | 12 (8) | 8 (5) | 4 (3) |
| Alopecia | 12 (8) | 12 (8) | 0 |
| Fatigue | 11 (7) | 10 (7) | 1 (1) |
| ALT increased | 11 (7) | 7 (5) | 3 (2) |
| AST increased | 10 (7) | 7 (5) | 2 (1) |
| Vomiting | 9 (6) | 9 (6) | 0 |
| General edema | 9 (6) | 5 (3) | 0 |
| Upper abdominal pain | 8 (5) | 8 (5) | 0 |
Ongoing MET inhibitor clinical trials [61]
| ClinicalTrials.gov identifier | Study agent | Trial description |
|---|---|---|
| NCT02609776 | Amivantamab | A Phase 1, First-in-Human, Open-Label, Dose Escalation Study of JNJ-61186372, a Human Bispecific EGFR and c-MET Antibody, in Subjects With Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer |
| NCT03175224 | APL-101 | Phase 1/2 Multicenter Study of the Safety, Pharmacokinetics, and Preliminary Efficacy of APL-101 in Subjects With Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer With cMETex14 Skip Mutations and cMET Dysregulation Advanced Solid Tumors |
| NCT01639508 | Cabozantinib | A Phase II Study of Cabozantinib in Patients With RET Fusion-Positive Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer and Those With Other Genotypes ROS1 or NTRK Fusions or Increased Met or AXL Activity |
| NCT02414139 | Capmatinib | A Phase II, Multicenter Study of Oral c-MET Inhibitor INC280 in Adult Patients With EGFR Wild-type (wt), Advanced Non-small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)(Geometry Mono-1) |
| NCT04270591 | Glumetinib | A Phase Ib/II, Open-Label, Multicenter Study to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of Glumetinib (SCC244), a Selective MET Inhibitor in Patients With Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Harboring MET alterations |
| NCT03539536 | Telisotuzumab vedotin | Phase 2, Open-Label Safety and Efficacy Study of Telisotuzumab Vedotin (ABBV-399) in Subjects With Previously Treated c-Met + Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer |
| NCT02864992 | Tepotinib | A Phase II Single-arm Trial to Investigate Tepotinib in Advanced (Locally Advanced or Metastatic) Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer with METex14 (METex14) Skipping Alterations or MET Amplification (VISION) |
| NCT03993873 | TPX-0022 | Phase 1 Study of TPX-0022, a MET/CSF1R/SRC Inhibitor, in Patients With Advanced Solid Tumors Harboring Genetic Alterations in MET |
| NCT04077099 | REGN5093 | A Phase 1/2 Study of REGN5093 in Patients with MET-Altered Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer |
| NCT04323436 | Capmatinib | A Double-blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized, Phase II Study Evaluating the Efficacy and Safety of Capmatinib and Spartalizumab vs Capmatinib and Placebo as 1st Line Treatment for Advanced NSCLC Patients With METex14 Skipping Mutation |