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D.R. Camidge
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Poster Display Session (ID 63)
- Event: ELCC 2017
- Type: Poster Display Session
- Track:
- Presentations: 1
- Moderators:
- Coordinates: 5/07/2017, 12:30 - 13:00, Hall 1
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97P - Brigatinib in crizotinib-refractory ALK+ NSCLC: Updates from the pivotal randomized phase 2 Trial (ALTA) (ID 247)
12:30 - 12:30 | Author(s): D.R. Camidge
- Abstract
Background:
In a phase 1/2 trial (NCT01449461), the investigational next-generation anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) inhibitor brigatinib (BRG) showed promising activity in crizotinib-treated ALK-positive non–small cell lung cancer (ALK+ NSCLC) patients (pts); because tumor responses and adverse events (AEs) varied with starting dose, two BRG regimens were evaluated in ALTA (NCT02094573).
Methods:
Pts with crizotinib-refractory advanced ALK+ NSCLC were stratified by presence of brain metastases and best response to prior crizotinib and randomized 1:1 to receive BRG at 90 mg qd in arm A or 180 mg qd with a 7-day lead-in at 90 mg in arm B. Investigator-assessed confirmed objective response rate (ORR) per RECIST v1.1 was the primary endpoint.
Results:
222 pts were enrolled (112 in arm A, 110 in arm B); median age was 54 years, 57% were female, 74% had received chemotherapy, and 69% had brain metastases. As of 29 February 2016, 57%/69% of pts in arms A/B were receiving BRG, with 7.8/8.3-month median follow-up. Investigator-assessed efficacy by arm and subgroup is shown below. Per independent review committee, as of 16 May 2016, confirmed ORR was 48%/53% and median PFS was 9.2/15.6 months in arms A/B. Treatment-emergent AEs with ≥25% overall frequency (A/B, n = 109/n=110 treated) were nausea 33%/40%, diarrhea 19%/38%, headache 28%/27%, and cough 18%/34%; grade ≥3 events with ≥3% frequency were hypertension 6%/6%, increased blood creatine phosphokinase 3%/9%, pneumonia 3%/5%, and increased lipase 4%/3%. A subset of pulmonary AEs with early onset (median onset: Day 2) occurred in 14/219 (6%) treated pts (3%, grade ≥3); no such events occurred after escalation to 180 mg in arm B, and 7/14 pts were successfully retreated.
Conclusions:
BRG yielded substantial efficacy, with an acceptable safety profile, in both arms. 180 mg with 90 mg lead-in showed an improvement in efficacy endpoints, particularly PFS, with no increase in early pulmonary AEs, compared with 90 mg. Investigator-Assessed Efficacy by Subgroup.rnTable: 97PDrnrn
rnCR = complete response, ORR = objective response rate, PFS = progression-free survival, PR = partial responsernaPrimary endpointrn rnrnrn Arm A n = 112 rnArm B n = 110 rnTotal N = 222 rnrn rnConfirmed ORR, n/N (%) rnrn rn rn rn rnAll pts[a] rn50/112 (45) rn59/110 (54) rn109/222 (49) rnrn rnRace rnrn rn rn rn rnAsian rn18/39 (46) rn18/30 (60) rn36/69 (52) rnrn rnNon-Asian rn32/73 (44) rn41/80 (51) rn73/153 (48) rnrn rnPrior chemotherapy rnrn rn rn rn rnYes rn35/83 (42) rn44/81 (54) rn79/164 (48) rnrn rnNo rn15/29 (52) rn15/29 (52) rn30/58 (52) rnrn rnBest response to prior crizotinib rnrn rn rn rn rnCR or PR rn36/71 (51) rn47/73 (64) rn83/144 (58) rnrn rnOther rn14/41 (34) rn12/37 (32) rn26/78 (33) rnrn rnBaseline brain metastases rnrn rn rn rn rnYes rn31/80 (39) rn43/74 (58) rn74/154 (48) rnrn rnNo rn19/32 (59) rn16/36 (44) rn35/68 (51) rnrn rnMedian PFS, months rnrn rn rn rn rnAll pts rn9.2 rn12.9 rn11.1 rnrn rnRace rnrn rn rn rn rnAsian rn8.8 rn11.1 rn11.1 rnrn rnNon-Asian rn9.2 rn12.9 rn11.8 rnrn rnPrior chemotherapy rnrn rn rn rn rnYes rn8.8 rn12.9 rn11.8 rnrn rnNo rn9.2 rn8.1 rn9.2 rnrn rnBest response to prior crizotinib rnrn rn rn rn rnCR or PR rn11.1 rn15.6 rn15.6 rnrn rnOther rn7.4 rn12.9 rn9.2 rnrn rnBaseline brain metastases rnrn rn rn rn rnYes rn9.2 rn11.8 rn11.1 rnrn rnrnNo rn7.4 rn15.6 rn15.6 rn
Clinical trial identification:
NCT02094573
Legal entity responsible for the study:
ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Funding:
ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Disclosure:
M. Tiseo: Consulting or advisory role (AstraZeneca, BMS, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Otsuka, Pierre Fabre), research funding (ARIAD). K.L. Reckamp: Consulting or advisory role (ARIAD), research funding (ARIAD). H.L. West: Consulting or advisory role (ARIAD, Astellas, AstraZeneca, BMS, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Merck, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche/Genentech, Trovagene), speakers’ bureau (ARIAD, Eli Lilly, Roche/Genentech). H.J. Groen: Consulting or advisory role (Eli Lilly, MSD, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche). C.J. Langer: Honoraria (BMS, Lilly/ImClone, Roche/Genentech), consulting or advisory role (Abbott, ARIAD, AstraZeneca, Bayer/Onyx, BMS, Cancer Support Community, Celgene, Clarient, Clovis Oncology, Lilly/ImClone, Merck, Millennium, Roche/Genentech), research funding (Advantagene, ARIAD, Celgene, Clovis Oncology, GSK, Inovio, Merck, Roche/Genentech). W. Reichmann, D. Kerstein: Employment, stock and other ownership interests (ARIAD). D.R. Camidge: Honoraria (ARIAD), research funding (ARIAD). All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
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Targeted therapies and management of brain metastasis (ID 40)
- Event: ELCC 2017
- Type: Proffered Paper session
- Track:
- Presentations: 1
- Moderators:D.P. Carbone, S. Ekman
- Coordinates: 5/06/2017, 16:45 - 18:15, Room A
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87O - Brigatinib in ALK+ NSCLC pts with intracranial CNS metastases in 2 clinical trials (ID 241)
17:36 - 17:48 | Author(s): D.R. Camidge
- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
The investigational next-generation anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) inhibitor brigatinib is being evaluated in patients (pts) with ALK-positive non–small cell lung cancer (ALK+ NSCLC) in a phase 1/2 trial (Ph1/2) and a pivotal phase 2 trial (ALTA); most of these pts had intracranial central nervous system (CNS) metastases at baseline.
Methods:
In Ph1/2 (NCT01449461), pts with advanced malignancies, including ALK+ NSCLC, received brigatinib (30–300 mg/d). In ALTA (NCT02094573), crizotinib-resistant pts with advanced ALK+ NSCLC received brigatinib at 90 mg qd in arm A or 180 mg qd with a 7-day lead-in at 90 mg in arm B. ALK+ NSCLC pts with baseline brain metastases were analyzed. CNS efficacy in both trials and safety in ALTA are shown.
Results:
In Ph1/2 and ALTA, 50/79 (63%) and 154/222 (69%) ALK+ NSCLC pts had baseline brain metastases based on independent review committee (IRC) and investigator assessment, respectively. Most pts had received chemotherapy (Table). In Ph1/2, 25/50 (50%) pts were receiving brigatinib as of 16 November 2015; in ALTA, 101/154 (66%) pts were receiving brigatinib as of 29 February 2016. In pts with measurable brain lesions, confirmed intracranial objective response rate was 53% in Ph1/2 and 42%/67% in ALTA A/B (Table). In pts with only nonmeasurable brain lesions, 35% (11/31) in Ph1/2 and 7% (4/54)/18% (10/55) in ALTA A/B had confirmed complete resolution of brain lesions. Further data are shown in the table. The most common treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) in the 151 treated ALTA pts with baseline brain metastases were nausea (A/B, 32%/43%), headache (30%/30%), diarrhea (18%/36%), cough (21%/30%), and vomiting (25%/26%); the most common grade ≥3 TEAEs were increased blood creatine phosphokinase (1%/11%), hypertension (4%/7%), increased lipase (3%/3%), and pneumonia (1%/4%).
Conclusions:
Brigatinib yielded substantial clinical activity in ALK+ NSCLC pts with brain metastases in 2 trials.rnTable: 87OBaseline characteristics and IRC-assessed intracranial efficacy of brigatinib in ALK+ NSCLC Pts with brain metastases at baselinernrn
rniDCR = intracranial disease control rate, iORR = intracranial objective response rate (confirmed), iPFS = intracranial progression-free survivalrnaLast scan date: 8 October 2015 in Ph1/2; 14 April 2016 in ALTArnbNo prior brain radiotherapy in Ph1/2; active (untreated or treated and progressed) brain lesions in ALTArn rnrnrn Ph1/2 n = 50 rnALTA Arm A n = 80 rnALTA Arm B n = 74 rnrn rnMedian age, years rn53 rn49 rn55 rnrn rnReceived prior chemotherapy, % rn76 rn74 rn76 rnrn rnCrizotinib-naive, % rn8 rn0 rn0 rnrn rnPts evaluable for intracranial efficacy by IRC, n[a] rn46 rn80 rn73 rnrn rnMedian iPFS, months rn14.6 rn15.6 rn12.8 rnrn rnPts with measurable brain lesions, n rn15 rn26 rn18 rnrn rniORR, n (%) rn8 (53) rn11 (42) rn12 (67) rnrn rniDCR, n (%) rn13 (87) rn22 (85) rn15 (83) rnrn rnNo rad/active[b] subset, n rn9 rn19 rn15 rnrn rniORR, n (%) rn6 (67) rn8 (42) rn11 (73) rnrn rnrniDCR, n (%) rn8 (89) rn16 (84) rn14 (93) rn
Clinical trial identification:
NCT01449461 and NCT02094573
Legal entity responsible for the study:
ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Funding:
ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Disclosure:
M. Tiseo: Consulting or advisory role (AstraZeneca, BMS, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Otsuka, Pierre Fabre), research funding (ARIAD). R.M. Huber: Honoraria (ARIAD, AstraZeneca, BMS, Boehringer Ingelheim, Pfizer, Roche), consulting or advisory role (BMS, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Clovis Oncology, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Roche), research funding (Pierre Fabre). L.A. Bazhenova: Stock and other ownership interests (Epic Sciences), honoraria (Novartis), consulting or advisory role (AbbVie, AstraZeneca, BMS, Boehringer Ingelheim, Clovis Oncology, Genoptix, Heat Biologics, Pfizer, Roche/Genentech, Seattle Genetics, Trovagene), speakers bureau (AstraZeneca, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche/Genentech), research funding (AbbVie, ARIAD, Astellas, Astex, AstraZeneca/MedImmune, Boehringer Ingelheim, Chugai, Clovis Oncology, Eisai, Eli Lilly, Heat Biologics, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Mirati, NanoCarrier, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche/Genentech). S-H.I. Ou: Advisory board (ARIAD). W. Reichmann, J. Haney, D. Kerstein: Employment, stock and other ownership interests (ARIAD). D.R. Camidge: Honoraria (ARIAD), research funding (ARIAD). S.N. Gettinger: Consulting or advisory role (ARIAD, BMS, Janssen), research funding (ARIAD, AstraZeneca/MedImmune, BMS, Boehringer Ingelheim, Incyte, Pfizer, Roche/Genentech). All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
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