Gefitinib NSCLC maintenance therapy
Office of Hematology and Oncology Products, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, United States Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring,
Maryland 20993, USA
Cite this article as: Cohen MH. Gefitinib NSCLC
maintenance therapy. Transl Lung Cancer Res 2012;1(2):94-95.
DOI: 10.3978/j.issn.2218-6751.2012.06.02
Research Highlight
Gefitinib NSCLC maintenance therapy
Office of Hematology and Oncology Products, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, United States Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring,
Maryland 20993, USA
|
Submitted May 09, 2012. Accepted for publication Jun 07, 2012.
DOI: 10.3978/j.issn.2218-6751.2012.06.02 |
Dr. Zhang and co-authors have demonstrated that
gefitinib “maintenance therapy” of newly diagnosed east
Asian non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients who
were progression-free after four cycles of platinum-based
doublet chemotherapy, resulted in a significant increase in
progression free survival (PFS) and objective response rate
without a concomitant increase in overall survival (OS).
The study design of the gefitinib trial is similar to the
design of erlotinib and pemetrexed maintenance trials
that have been approved by the United States Food and
Drug Administration (1,2). The pemetrexed trial approval
was limited to patients with non-squamous histology
whereas the erlotinib approval included all non-small cell
histologies. In these studies the median age of patients
was about 60 years, the majority of patients were male and
White and about 20% were never smokers. Most patients
had Stage IV disease. In the erlotinib study 69% of patients
were epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) positive by
immunohistochemistry.
In the erlotinib trial the P-value for PFS in the intent to
treat population was P<0.0001 while the P-value for overall
survival was a more modest P=0.009. In the pemetrexed
trial corresponding P-values were P<0.00001 for PFS and
P=0.012 for OS.
The following issues impact the interpretation of the
aforementioned maintenance trials; (I) the most appropriate
study design; (II) the appropriate efficacy endpoint; (III)
whether the risk to benefit relationship is favorable or not;
and (IV) for EGFR targeted drugs the need for an approved
companion in-vitro diagnostic.
What a maintenance trial ideally should be testing
is whether immediate treatment after 4 cycles of
chemotherapy is superior to delayed treatment started at the
time of disease progression. If this is the case then the same
regimen must be used for both patient groups. Neither the
two FDA approved trials nor the present gefitinib study
used this design. In the pemetrexed trial 67% of patients
randomized to the placebo arm received post-progression
second-line chemotherapy. Of these patients only 27%
received pemetrexed the remainder receiving other U.S.
FDA approved second-line drugs including docetaxel,
erlotinib or gefitinib, gemcitabine and vinorelbine. Similarly
in the erlotinib maintenance study of the 57% of placebo
treated patients who received post-progression second-line
chemotherapy only 14% received erlotinib or gefitinib. In
the present gefitinib report 62% of placebo treated patients
received post-progression chemotherapy and only 29%
received targeted drugs, Thus none of the aforementioned
trials adequately tested the worth of maintenance
chemotherapy.
As regards the appropriate primary efficacy endpoint all
studies used PFS. If one considers the hypothesis underlying
the maintenance concept that early therapy when the tumor
burden is reduced is superior to delayed therapy after tumor
regrowth then OS is the appropriate endpoint. The fact
that all trials showed a greater effect on PFS than on OS is
troublesome.
Patients receiving immediate treatment are at greater
risk for drug related adverse events than are placebo treated
patients. Adverse events may result in hospitalization, the
need for blood product transfusion and, in extreme cases,
to death. Treatment toxicity must be considered when
evaluating the risk to benefit relationship of a proposed
maintenance treatment regimen.
When conducting studies with EGFR targeted agents
the need for a companion diagnostic to detect exon 19
deletions, exon 21 L858R point mutations or mutations or
deletions in other exons of the tyrosine kinase domain of the EGFR is essential for maximizing treatment benefit. No
such devise has been submitted to the U.S. FDA, to date.
In summary, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical
trials of maintenance therapy of NSCLC patients who
have completed 4 cycles of a platinum doublet regimen
without disease progression have consistently demonstrated
improvement in PFS with more modest improvement
in OS. The cost is increased, though usually clinically
manageable, toxicity.
The most frequently stated reason for the OS results is
the confounding effect of subsequent therapy of placebo
treated patients. It generally is not acknowledged that
patients who receive maintenance therapy may also receive
additional therapy at progression. Moreover this reasoning
ignores the potential benefit of treatment when the tumor
burden is reduced.
|
Acknowledgements
The views expressed are the result of independent
work and do not necessarily represent the views and findings
of the United States Food and Drug Administration.
|
References
|