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T. Nukiwa
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P2.03 - Chemotherapy/Targeted Therapy (ID 704)
- Event: WCLC 2017
- Type: Poster Session with Presenters Present
- Track: Chemotherapy/Targeted Therapy
- Presentations: 2
- Moderators:
- Coordinates: 10/17/2017, 09:30 - 16:00, Exhibit Hall (Hall B + C)
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P2.03-010 - Updated Survival Outcomes of NEJ005/TCOG0902, a Randomized PII of Gefitinib and Chemotherapy in EGFR-Mutant NSCLC (ID 7948)
09:30 - 09:30 | Author(s): T. Nukiwa
- Abstract
Background:
North East Japan Study Group (NEJ) 005/ Tokyo Cooperative Oncology Group (TCOG) 0902 study has demonstrated that first-line concurrent (C) and sequential alternating (S) combination therapies of EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor (gefitinib) plus platinum-based doublet chemotherapy (carboplatin/pemetrexed) offer promising efficacy with predictable toxicities for patients with EGFR-mutant NSCLC (ASCO2014, Ann Oncol 2015). However, overall survival (OS) data were insufficient because of the lack of death events in the primary report.
Method:
Progression-free survival (PFS) and OS were re-evaluated at the final data cutoff point (March 2017) for the entire population (N = 80).
Result:
At the median follow-up time of 35.6 months, 88.8% of patients had progressive disease and 77.5% of patients had died. Median PFS was 17.5 months for the C regimen and 15.3 months for the S regimen (p = 0.13). Median OS time was 41.9 with the C regimen and 30.7 months with the S regimen (p = 0.036). Updated response rates were similar in both groups (90.2% and 82.1%, respectively; p = 0.34). Patients who had common mutations showed no significant differences in PFS according to type of mutation. Patients with Del19 displayed relatively better OS (median: 45.3 and 33.3 months for C and S regimens) than those with L858R (31.4 and 28.9 months). No severe adverse events including interstitial lung disease have occurred during the follow-up period since the primary report. In an exploratory analysis, there was no significant difference in post progression survival and overall survival between patients with progression of target or non-target lesions and those progressed with new lesions.
Conclusion:
This updated analysis has confirmed that PFS is improved with first-line combination therapies compared to that with gefitinib monotherapy, and the C regimen in particular offers an overall survival benefit of 42 months in the EGFR-mutated setting. Our on-going NEJ009 study will clarify whether this combinational strategy can be incorporated into routine clinical practice.
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P2.03-021 - A Phase I Study Evaluating the Combination of Afatinib, Carboplatin and Pemetrexed after Failure of 1<Sup>St</Sup> Generation EGFR-TKIs (ID 8713)
09:30 - 09:30 | Author(s): T. Nukiwa
- Abstract
Background:
Despite the high response rate in patients with EGFR-mutation positive NSCLC, treatment with EGFR-TKIs is not curative and eventually there is disease progression. In patients with acquired resistance to 1[st] generation EGFR-TKIs, previous studies have demonstrated that afatinib had some clinical activity. We previously reported that the combination of gefitinib, pemetrexed and carboplatin showed promising antitumor efficacies in EGFR-mutated lung cancer patients. In this phase I trial, we assessed the safety and efficacy of afatinib combined with pemetrexed and carboplatin in NSCLC patients who acquired resistance.
Method:
Patients with EGFR-mutation positive metastatic NSCLC, who had received 1[st] line gefitinib or erlotinib and developed disease progression were eligible. Patients received pemetrexed 500 mg/m[2] and carboplatin AUC=5 on day 1 in all cohorts, and afatinib at doses of 20, 30 and 40 mg/body from day 8 to 18 of 21-day cycle. DLT was assessed after the first cycle, and doses were escalated in cohorts of 3 to 6 patients.
Result:
Eleven patients were enrolled to this trial and 9 patients were evaluable for safety and efficacy. At an afatinib dose of 30mg/body, 3 patients experienced DLT (grade 3 diarrhea, grade 3 hypokalemia, grade 4 thrombocytopenia, grade 3 amylase elevation and grade 3 gamma-glutamyl transferase). The overall response rate was 20% (95% C.I. 5.7 to 51) and median progression free survival was 16.2 months (95% C.I. 4.7 to not reached).
Conclusion:
The MTD of afatinib is 20mg/body in combination with pemetrexed 500 mg/m[2] and carboplatin AUC=5 on day 1 every 21 days. This combination demonstrated activity in EGFR mutation positive NSCLC with acquired resistance to 1[st] line EGFR-TKIs.
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P3.01 - Advanced NSCLC (ID 621)
- Event: WCLC 2017
- Type: Poster Session with Presenters Present
- Track: Advanced NSCLC
- Presentations: 1
- Moderators:
- Coordinates: 10/18/2017, 09:30 - 16:00, Exhibit Hall (Hall B + C)
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P3.01-035 - Post-Marketing Observational Study of Japanese Patients with EGFR Mutation-Positive (EGFRm+) NSCLC Treated with Daily Afatinib (Final Report) (ID 9250)
09:30 - 09:30 | Author(s): T. Nukiwa
- Abstract
Background:
This is a prospective, post-marketing surveillance study (NCT02131259) to evaluate safety and effectiveness of the irreversible ErbB family blocker, afatinib, which is approved in Japan for the treatment of inoperable/recurrent EGFRm+ NSCLC.
Method:
Patients with inoperable/recurrent EGFRm+ NSCLC received afatinib at the approved dose (20–50 mg/day) and were observed following treatment initiation for 52 weeks/until premature discontinuation. Data were included for all patients who received afatinib during the investigational period of this study, thus minimizing patient selection bias. The incidence/severity of adverse drug reactions (ADRs)/serious ADRs (sADRs) was the primary endpoint. Other endpoints included effectiveness (objective response rate [ORR]) and the incidence/severity of ADRs of special interest (diarrhea, rash/acne, nail effects [NEs] and interstitial lung disease [ILD]).
Result:
As of February 2017, 1,602 patients were included in the analysis (59% female, 81% aged <75 years, 86% ECOG PS 0–1, 83% BMI <25 kg/m[2]). 97% of patients had adenocarcinoma, and 64%/26% had EGFR Del19/L858R mutations. 70% had ≥1 line of prior chemotherapy; 48%/30% had prior gefitinib/erlotinib. Afatinib starting dose was 40 mg in 77% of patients. 95% had ADRs (36% grade ≥3). The most frequently reported ADRs (all grade/grade 3–4) were diarrhea (78%/15%), rash/acne (59%/6%), stomatitis (31%/4%), and NEs (38%/4%). ILD (all grade/grade 3–4/grade 5) occurred in 4%/2%/1% of patients. Median (range) time to initial onset was 5.0 (1–316) days for diarrhea, 11.0 (1–406) days for rash/acne, 9.0 (1–327) days for stomatitis, 38.0 (1–526) days for NEs, and 35.5 (3–329) days for ILD. Four patients (<1%) had creatinine elevation following grade ≥3 diarrhea. Dose reductions/permanent discontinuations occurred in 8%/7% of patients following diarrhea, 6%/4% following rash/acne, 3%/2% following stomatitis, 5%/2% following NEs, and <1%/4% following ILD. 33% of patients experienced sADRs. ADR frequency was associated with starting dose (96%/91% with 40/<40 mg afatinib), but was not unfavorably impacted by age, ECOG PS, number of prior chemotherapies, or previous EGFR TKIs. ORR with afatinib was higher in EGFR TKI-naïve patients than those who had previously been treated with EGFR TKIs (68% versus 21%).
Conclusion:
Consistent with previous studies, afatinib was effective in inoperable/recurrent EGFRm+ NSCLC, particularly as first-line targeted treatment (ORR ~70%). ADRs were predictable and generally manageable. ADR frequency was not notably affected by age, ECOG PS or number of previous therapies. In clinical practice, patients should be closely monitored and ADRs, particularly diarrhea and ILD, treated early to prevent sADRs.