Randomized Phase II Trial of Erlotinib Beyond Progression in Advanced Erlotinib-Responsive Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Article

cited authors

  • Halmos, Balazs, Pennell, Nathan A., Fu, Pingfu, Saad, Shumaila, Gadgeel, Shirish, Otterson, Gregory A., Mekhail, Tarek, Snell, Michael, Kuebler, Philip, Sharma, Neelesh, Dowlati, Afshin

funding text

  • Support for this study was provided by Astellas Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

abstract

  • Background. Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapyis clearly beneficial inpatients with advanced EGFR-mutated non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, acquired resistance develops uniformly and the benefit of continuation of EGFR TKI therapy beyond progression remains unclear. Materials and Methods. This was a randomized phase II study of chemotherapy (arm A: pemetrexed or docetaxel) versus chemotherapy plus erlotinib (ERL) (arm B) in patients with progressive NSCLC following clinical benefit from erlotinib. In arm B, chemotherapy was given with erlotinib at an oral daily dose of 150 mg on days 2-19 of each cycle to minimize negative pharmacodynamic interactions. The primary endpoint was that continuation of erlotinib in this patient population could extend progression-free survival (PFS) by 50%. Results. A total of 46 patients were randomized (arm A: 24; arm B: 22). Patient characteristics were well balanced except there were more female patients in arm A (p = .075). The median PFS of patients in arm A was 5.5 months and for those in arm B, 4.4 months (p = .699). The response rates were 13% and 16% in arms A and B, respectively (p = .79). EGFR status data were available for 39 of the 46 patients and no significant difference in PFS was seen for continuing ERL beyond progression in mutation-positive patients. Substantially more toxicity was seen in arm B than arm A. Conclusion. There was added toxicity but no benefit with the continuation of ERL beyond progression along with chemotherapy as compared with chemotherapy alone.

Publication Date

  • November 1, 2015

webpage

published in

category

start page

  • 1298

end page

  • 1303

volume

  • 20

issue

  • 11

WoS Citations

  • 14

WoS References

  • 15