| Literature DB >> 35743191 |
Anna Michelotti1,2, Marco de Scordilli1,2, Elisa Bertoli1,2, Elisa De Carlo2, Alessandro Del Conte2, Alessandra Bearz2.
Abstract
Standard treatment for advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) historically consisted of systemic cytotoxic chemotherapy until the early 2000s, when precision medicine led to a revolutionary change in the therapeutic scenario. The identification of oncogenic driver mutations in EGFR, ALK and ROS1 rearrangements identified a subset of patients who largely benefit from targeted agents. However, since the proportion of patients with druggable alterations represents a minority, the discovery of new potential driver mutations is still an urgent clinical need. We provide a comprehensive review of the emerging molecular targets in NSCLC and their applications in the advanced setting.Entities:
Keywords: HER2; KRAS; MET; NSCLC; NTRK; RET; new targets; oncogene-addiction; precision medicine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35743191 PMCID: PMC9223783 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23126748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Timeline of FDA approval of targeted therapies for NSCLC (the colors are matched between driver alteration and targeted agent). The identification of actionable biomarkers led to significant progress in the treatment of NSCLC. EGFR alterations are detected in approximately 9% of NSCLC patients [6,7] and in the last two decades several agents targeting sensitive mutations received approval from the FDA. The first–generation EGFR–TKI inhibitors, erlotinib and gefitinib, received FDA approval for the treatment of advanced NSCLC in November 2004 and July 2015, respectively. Afatinib is the most studied second–generation inhibitor and received approval in July 2013. Two years later, the third–generation TKI-inhibitor, osimertinib, was initially approved for the treatment of EGFR–T790M mutation positive NSCLC, then in April 2018 it received approval as a first–line treatment for EGFR mutated NSCLC. ALK fusion–positive tumors account for 3.9% of NSCLC adenocarcinomas [8]. Several targeted drugs are available for this subset of patients: the first–generation drug crizotinib was approved in August 2011 and then the FDA expanded its use to treat ROS1–positive patients, a rare subgroup accounting for approximately 1% [9]. Second–generation ALK inhibitors, ceritinib, alectinib and brigatinib, were approved by the FDA between April 2014 and May 2020. The third–generation inhibitor lorlatinib received approval in 2018 for pretreated ALK–positive patients, and later in 2021 for the first–line setting. In June 2017, the FDA approved a combination therapy of dabrafenib and trametinib for BRAFV600E mutation–positive metastatic NSCLC, accounting for 1% of lung cancer patients [10]. NTRK is found in 1% of NSCLC [19,20]. Larotrectinib is a specific NTRK inhibitor approved in 2018 and represents the second tissue–agnostic FDA approval for the treatment of cancer Entrectinib received approval in August 2019 for both treatment of NTRK and ROS1- positive NSCLC. In the last two years, major progress has been made: in 2020 the FDA approved the targeted agents selpercatinib and pralsetinib for RET fusion–positive NSCLC (1–2%) [5,21]; capmatinib and tepotinib received FDA approval for NSCLC harboring a METex14 skipping mutation (2–4%) [22,23] in May 2020 and February 2021, respectively; sotorasib was approved in May 2021 for the treatment of KRAS mutated NSCLC (approximately 13%) [24] in patients who have received at least one prior systemic therapy.
Clinical activity of currently FDA approved targeted agents.
| Clinical Trial | Trial Type | Driver Mutation | Treatment Arms | Clinical Outcomes | Most Frequent AEs (All Grades) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Phase 2, multicenter, multi-cohort, single-arm, non-randomized, open-label study | METex14 skipping mutation | Capmatinib | Pretreated pts: ORR 41%, DoR 9.7, mPFS 5.4 m. | Peripheral edema, nausea, vomiting, creatinine increase. |
|
| Phase 2, multicenter, multi-cohort, single-arm, non-randomized, open-label study | METex14 skipping mutation | Tepotinib | Combined biopsy: ORR by ICR 46%, DoR 11.1 m, mPFS 8.5 m. | Peripheral edema, nausea, diarrhea, creatinine increase. |
|
| Phase 1/2 trial, international, open-label study | RET fusion | Selpercatinib | ORR by ICR 64%, DoR 17.5 m, mPFS 18.4 m. | Diarrhea, AST increase, dry mouth, hypertension, fatigue. |
|
| Phase 1/2, multi-cohort, international, open-label study | RET fusion | Pralsetinib | Pretreated: ORR 61%, DoR NR, mPFS 17.1 m. | AST/ALT increase, anemia, leucopenia, fatigue, constipation. |
|
| Phase 1/2, multi-cohort, international, open-label study | NTRK gene fusion | Larotrectinib * | Overall population: ORR 75%, DoR NR, mPFS NR. | AST/ALT increase, anemia, neutropenia, weight increase. |
|
| Phase 1/2, multicenter, multi-cohort, single-arm, non-randomized, open-label study | NTRK gene fusion | Larotrectinib * | ORR 30%, DCR 70%, mPFS 18.3 m, mOS NR. | AST/ALT increase, leucopenia, neutropenia, vomiting. |
|
| Phase 1/2, multicenter, single-arm, non-randomized, open-label study | NTRK gene fusion, ROS1 rearrangement | Entrectinib | Overall population: ORR 59.3%, DoR 12.9, mPFS 12.9 m, mOS 23.9 m. | Fatigue, dysgeusia, paresthesia, nausea, myalgia. |
|
| Phase 2, multicenter, international, single arm, open-label study | Sotorasib | ORR by ICR 37.4%, DCR 80.5%, mPFS 6.7 m. | AST/ALT increase, leucopenia, anemia, diarrhea, myalgia, nausea, fatigue, hepatotoxicity, cough. |
Abbreviations: ORR, objective response rate; pts, patients; mPFS, median progression-free survival; mOS, median overall survival; m, months; AEs, adverse events; DoR, duration of response; ICR, independent central review; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; ALT, alanine transferase; NR, not reached; DCR, disease control rate. * Larotrectinib received agnostic approval for NTRK fusion-positive tumors.
A selection of clinical trials testing novel strategies to target MET altered NSCLC.
| NCT Number | Gene Alteration | Experimental Drug | Phase | Study Design | Current Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| MET amplification | Savolitinib | 3 | Randomized: savolitinib + osimertinib vs. pemetrexed + cisplatin/carboplatin | Recruiting |
|
| MET amplification | Glumetinib | 1/2 | Single group assignment | Unknown |
|
| MET amplification | SAR125844 | 2 | Single group assignment | Completed |
|
| MET mutation, amplification | MGCD265 | 2 | Single group assignment | Completed |
|
| METex14, amplification, fusion | APL-101 | 1/2 | Single group assignment | Recruiting |
|
| MET mutation, amplification | Glumetinib | 1/2 | Single group assignment | Active, not recruiting |
|
| MET amplification | Sym015 | 1/2 | Single group assignment | Completed |
|
| MET amplification | Telisotuzumab vedotin | 2 | Single group assignment | Recruiting |
|
| MET amplification | Savolitinib | 2 | Randomized: osimertinib ± savolitinib | Not yet recruiting |
|
| MET mutation, amplification | TPX-0022 | 1/2 | Single group assignment | Recruiting |
Trials testing novel agents targeting RET fusions in NSCLC.
| NCT Number | Gene Alteration | Experimental Drug | Phase | Study Design | Current Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| RET alterations | TAS0953/HM06 | 1/2 | Sequential assignment | Recruiting |
|
| RET mutation | RXDX-105 | 1 | Single group assignment | Completed |
|
| RET alterations | BOS172738 | 1 | Sequential assignment | Active, not recruiting |
|
| RET fusion, mutation | TPX-0046 | 1/2 | Single group assignment | Recruiting |
|
| RET rearrangement, fusion | RXDX-105 | 1 | Single group assignment | Completed |
Trials testing novel agents or combination strategies for KRAS mutant NSCLC.
| NCT Number | Gene Alteration | Experimental Drug | Phase | Study Design | Current Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Binimetinib plus palbociclib | 1/2 | Single group assignment | Recruiting | |
|
| VIC-1911 plus sotorasib | 1 | Single group assignment | Not yet recruiting | |
|
| Adagrasib | 3 | Randomized: adagrasib vs. docetaxel | Recruiting | |
|
| Binimetinib | 2 | Single group assignment | Recruiting | |
|
| JDQ443 | 3 | Randomized: JDQ443 | Recruiting | |
|
| Trametinib plus anlotinib | 1 | Single group assignment | Recruiting | |
|
| VS-6766 | 2 | Randomized: VS-6766 ± | Recruiting | |
|
| Selumetinib | 3 | Randomized: docetaxel + selumetinib/placebo | Active, not recruiting | |
|
| Adagrasib | 2 | Randomized: adagrasib ± pembrolizumab | Recruiting | |
|
| Trametinib plus pembrolizumab | 1 | Single group assignment | Active, not recruiting | |
|
| Regorafenib plus methotrexate | 1 | Single group assignment | Active, not recruiting | |
|
| JAB 21822 | 1 | Sequential assignment | Not yet recruiting | |
|
| RO5126766 | 1 | Single group assignment | Active, not recruiting | |
|
| Trametinib plus docetaxel | 2 | Single group assignment | Active, not recruiting | |
|
| TVB-2640 | 2 | Single group assignment | Recruiting | |
|
| Defactinib plus adagrasib | 1/2 | Sequential assignment | Not yet recruiting | |
|
| GDC-6036 | 2 | Single group assignment | Recruiting | |
|
| RMC-6236 | 1 | Single group assignment | Not yet recruiting | |
|
| Futibatinib and binimetinib | 1/2 | Single group assignment | Recruiting | |
|
| Rigosetib | 1/2 | Sequential assignment | Recruiting | |
|
| JDQ443, TNO155, tislelizumab | 1/2 | Sequential assignment | Recruiting | |
|
| JAB-21822, JAB-3312 | 1/2 | Sequential assignment | Not yet recruiting | |
|
| JDQ443 | 1/2 | Sequential assignment | Not yet recruiting | |
|
| RMC-4630 plus sotorasib | 2 | Sequential assignment | Recruiting | |
|
| LY3537982 | 1 | Single group assignment | Recruiting |