Perspective on treatment for unresectable locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer with oncogene-driven mutation: a narrative review
Review Article

Perspective on treatment for unresectable locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer with oncogene-driven mutation: a narrative review

Liyang Jiang, Xiangjiao Meng, Xianguang Zhao, Ligang Xing, Jinming Yu

Department of Radiation Oncology, Shandong Cancer Hospital and Institute, Shandong First Medical University and Shandong Academy of Medical Sciences, Jinan, China

Contributions: (I) Conception and design: L Xing; (II) Administrative support: L Xing, J Yu; (III) Provision of study materials or patients: None; (IV) Collection and assembly of data: L Jiang, X Meng; (V) Data analysis and interpretation: L Jiang, X Meng, X Zhao, L Xing; (VI) Manuscript writing: All authors; (VII) Final approval of manuscript: All authors.

Correspondence to: Ligang Xing, MD. Department of Radiation Oncology, Shandong Cancer Hospital and Institute, Shandong First Medical University and Shandong Academy of Medical Sciences, 440 Jiyan Road, Jinan, China. Email: xinglg@medmail.com.cn.

Abstract: The standard treatment of unresectable locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (LA NSCLC) is concurrent chemoradiotherapy. With the addition of immunotherapy, patients with LA NSCLC received a significantly prolonged outcome, while patients with harboring epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutation benefited less. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have revolutionized the treatment of stage IV with harboring EGFR mutation and anaplastic lymphoma kinase rearrangement, but there are few recommendations indicating whether TKI treatment is effective in unresectable NSCLC. Preclinical studies have shown that TKIs could have a radiosensitizing effect, which provided a rationale to consider the application TKI with radiotherapy. In this review, we summarize the clinical studies that have used TKIs in LA-NSCLC as well as ongoing trials, and discuss recent progress in research related to the efficacy of TKI for unresectable LA NSCLC patients. Recent results of small studies evaluating TKI therapy for LA NSCLC patients in combination with radiation or chemoradiation demonstrated promising efficacy, improved outcomes with a tolerable toxicity profile. However, there is a lack of strong evidence for TKI treatment in unresectable LA NSCLC, because of unpowered statistics, lack of molecular selection, or lack of large randomized arms. We prospect the combination of TKI and radiation or chemoradiation therapy might eventually replace the current standard treatment for patients with LA NSCLC harboring oncogene-driven mutation.

Keywords: Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC); locally advanced stage (LA stage); epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR); anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK); targeted therapy


Submitted Mar 27, 2020. Accepted for publication Aug 10, 2020.

doi: 10.21037/tlcr-20-722


Introduction

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide, accounting for 1.8 million deaths each year (1). Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) represents 85% of all primary lung cancers (2). About 20% to 25% of NSCLC patients are diagnosed with locally advanced (LA) disease (3). For unresectable LA NSCLC patients with good performance status, concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRT) is currently recommended as standard treatment with 5-year overall survival (OS) rates between 15–32% (4-6). Unfortunately, the survival outcomes of these patients seem to reach a plateau despite the use of newer chemotherapy agents, therefore, the optimal concurrent chemotherapy regimen has not yet been determined (7). The RTOG 0617 trial concluded the addition of cetuximab did not improve survival, and the standard radiation dose of 60 Gy was still better than 74 Gy (6). Moreover, consolidation chemotherapy is not recommended after standard CCRT due to no prognosis improvement of LA-NSCLC (8). In the phase III PACIFIC trial, treatment with durvalumab, a programmed cell death-ligand 1 inhibitor, significantly prolonged progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with LA NSCLC (9). However, patients with the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutation probably benefited less from this treatment.

EGFR is a transmembrane glycoprotein that constitutes one of four members of the ErbB family of tyrosine kinase receptors. Binding EGFR to its ligands leads to autophosphorylation of receptor tyrosine kinase and subsequent activation of signal transduction pathways that are involved in regulating cellular proliferation, differentiation and survival (Figure 1) (10).

Figure 1 Simplified signaling pathways activated by epidermal growth factor receptor.

Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have revolutionized the treatment of stage IV NSCLC with harboring EGFR mutation and anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) rearrangement. First-generation EGFR- and ALK-TKIs such as gefitinib, erlotinib, and crizotinib have been shown to significantly prolong PFS and double the overall response rate as compared with platinum-doublet chemotherapy (11-13). Meanwhile, a third-generation EGFR-TKI, osimertinib, has demonstrated improved PFS and even OS, over the previous generation of TKIs (14,15). Although these clinical trials included stage IIIB and stage IV patients, the proportion of stage IIIB patients was low.

Some studies suggest that the proportion of LA NSCLC harboring EGFR mutation is about 10–30% with the ALK rearrangement proportion being about 2–8% (16-18). Further studies discovered that, with the treatment of chemoradiotherapy (CRT), the PFS of these patients was significantly poorer than the wild-type EGFR patients, while the frequency of distant metastasis was higher (19-21). Meanwhile, other research has reported a better OS rate in a EGFR-mutant group compared with that of a wild-type group, but the difference was not statistically significant (19,22).

Thus, what treatment constitutes the best opinion for unresectable LA NSCLC oncogene-harboring driven mutation remains unclear. It is possible that the that positive results for stage IV patients might extend to those with LA NSCLC. We here summarize the recent progress in research related to the efficacy of TKIs for unresectable LA NSCLC patients as well as ongoing trials including with ALK rearrangement. We present the following article in accordance with the Narrative Review Checklist (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/tlcr-20-722).


EGFR-TKIs alone

A retrospective study compared the outcomes of TKIs and CCRT for stage IIIB lung adenocarcinoma patients with EFGR mutation (23). Hsia et al. collected the treatment information of 177 TKIs and 22 CCRT patients from 2011 to 2015, yielding a 5-year OS rates in the TKIs and CCRT group of approximately 30% and 26%, respectively, but no statistically significant differences between the groups. Given the limited data, a definite conclusion cannot be drawn concerning whether the application of EGFR-TKIs alone is a preferred treatment for EGFR-mutant LA NSCLC.


EGFR-TKIs and radiotherapy

Preclinical studies have shown that EGFR-mutant NSCLC cells have a predominantly radiosensitive phenotype, with gefitinib being capable of radiosensitizing tumor cells and erlotinib being capable of enhancing the cytotoxic effects of radiation, suggests that the TKIs could have a radiosensitizing effect (24-26). Several mechanisms have been identified in preclinical studies that can help improve local tumour control when treated with radiation plus TKIs. These include direct kill of cancer stem cells by TKIs, cellular radiosensitization through modified signal transduction, inhibition of repair of DNA damage, reduced repopulation and improved reoxygenation during fractionated radiotherapy (27). These facts provide a rationale to consider the application EGFR-TKIs with concurrent radiotherapy. In unselected patients, a series of 9 unresectable stage III NSCLC patients were treated with a 2-week induction of gefitinib followed by gefitinib with concurrent definitive radiotherapy (28). The high incidence of pulmonary toxicity led to closure of the study, with only 4 patients completing the planned treatment and experiencing partial responses; 3 of these 4 patients lived over 60 months without local recurrence, while only 2 them exhibited the sensitizing EFGR mutation, with both surviving over 5 years. Furthermore, no more unexpected toxicity occurred during the treatment with gefitinib and radiotherapy. Additionally, Rothschild et al.’s study also confirmed the feasibility and tolerability of gefitinib in combination with definitely radiotherapy (29): no lung toxicity was found in 5 patients and adverse events were grade 1–2 skin and subcutaneous tissue toxicities.

RECEL (NCT01714908) was a randomized phase II trial, that aimed to compare erlotinib with radiotherapy versus etoposide–cisplatin with radiotherapy for EGFR-mutated LA NSCLC. A total of 252 patients were screened, and 41 were eventually enrolled into 2 arms. Early results revealed that the erlotinib and radiotherapy arm had significantly improved PFS as compared to the CRT arm (27.86 vs. 6.41 months, hazard ratio 0.053, 95%, confidence interval 0.006–0.463, P<0.001) with same incidence of adverse effects being found in the 2 arms (Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events grade ≥1, 86.7%, 13/15). The most common grade ≥3 severe adverse effects were rash (20%, 3/15) and hematological toxicity (26.7%, 4/15) (30). Data is still being collected from the ongoing phase II WJOG6911L trial which is analyzing gefitinib with concurrent radiation (64 Gy/32 F) followed by gefitinib maintenance for up to 2 years in 27 patients with EGFR-mutated unresectable LA NSCLC (31). For the EGFR-mutated LA NSCLC patients, radiotherapy and the addition of EGFR-TKIs, rather than chemotherapy, have yielded positive and promising survival results.


EGFR-TKIs and CRT

In the early 2000s, EGFR-TKIs were evaluated in concurrent and maintenance settings in LA NSCLC. A phase I trial of erlotinib combined with CCRT failed to demonstrate the benefit of TKI addition (32). Patients received erlotinib only during CCRT. The survival results were disappointing in the unselected patients, and those with EGFR mutation also showed no significant OS difference. However, erlotinib was well tolerated and no additional radiation pneumonitis was observed. The SWOG S0023 trial also failed to prove any survival benefit (33). This phase III trial randomized 620 unselected LA NSCLC patients after CCRT and docetaxel consolidation to receive up to 5 years of gefitinib or placebo. Patients receiving gefitinib had unexpectedly decreased survival compared with those receiving placebo (23 vs. 35 months, P=0.013). The gefitinib was well-tolerated and thus the disappointing survival results might not have resulted from treatment toxicity; rather, the poor outcome was ascribed to the lack of oncogene selection in patients. The CALGB 30106 trial randomized 60 unselected patients to receive 2 cycles of induction paclitaxel–carboplatin chemotherapy with concurrent gefitinib followed by gefitinib and definitive radiotherapy (66 Gy/33 F) in poor-risk patients (performance status 2 or weight loss ≥5%) or gefitinib and definitive radiotherapy plus weekly paclitaxel-carboplatin chemotherapy in good-risk patients (performance status 0–1 or weight loss <5%), and gefitinib maintenance (34). Similar to the result of the SWOG S0023 trial, the survival of good-risk patients receiving CCRT plus gefitinib was disappointing and even worse than that of the poor-risk patients (13 vs. 19 months). Furthermore, no difference was found in median OS and PFS between the EGFR-mutated patients and the wild-type patients (8.5 vs. 15.3 months, P=0.8834; 6.7 vs. 11.4 months, P=0.8778’ respectively). Compared with historical data, acute high-grade infield toxicity was not increased.

The CALGB 30605/RTOG 0972 trial focused on poor-risk patients who do not seem to benefit from standard CRT treatment (35). In the previous CALGB 30106 trial, poor-risk patients were defined as performance status 2 or weight loss ≥5%, and the median survival reached an unprecedented 19 months (34). The CALGB 30605/RTOG 0972 trial enrolled poor-risk patients who had either performance status 2 or performance status 0–1 and ≥10% weight loss within 3 months. They received 2 cycles of induction nab-paclitaxel-carboplatin chemotherapy followed by erlotinib concurrently with radiotherapy (66 Gy/33 F). Molecular data were available for 31 out of 75 patients. Unexpectedly, no EGFR-mutated patients were identified. Treatment-related adverse events were well tolerated. Grade 3 esophagitis was observed in 4 patients and pneumonitis in only 1 patient. The median PFS and OS were 11 and 17 months, respectively. The overall 1-year OS was 57%, which narrowly missed the prespecified target for significance.

The JCOG 0402 trial, however, achieved somewhat encouraging survival results, with a 73% objective response rate, 28.5 months median OS, and 65.4% 2-year OS (36). In this trial, 38 unselected patients received 2 cycles of induction vinorelbine-cisplatin chemotherapy followed by gefitinib (up to 1 year) and concurrent radiotherapy (60 Gy/30 F). Similar to the SWOG S0023 trial, gefitinib maintenance did not also increase the rate of pneumonitis. Erlotinib also obtained promising survival results in a phase II trial reported by Komaki et al. (37). In this trial, 46 unselected patients received 7 weekly cycles of paclitaxel-carboplatin chemotherapy (every Monday) concurrent radiation (every Monday through Friday, 63 Gy/35 F) and erlotinib (every Tuesday through Sunday), followed by 2 cycles of paclitaxel–carboplatin consolidation chemotherapy after a 1-month break. Although median PFS time was 14.0 months (failing to meet authors’ hypothesis of 15 to 25 months), the median OS and 2-year OS satisfactorily reached 36.5 months and 67.4%, respectively. These findings may suggest a potential survival benefit of TKIs, although the EGFR status was either unknown or wild type in all trials.

As it was realized that EGFR-TKIs were becoming more effective in patients with EGFR mutation, subsequent studies more rationally designed the treatment regimens according to EGFR mutation status. In a single-arm study, 62 EGFR-mutated stage III–IV patients received 4 cycles of platinum-based doublet chemotherapy followed by radiotherapy (60 Gy/30 F) concurrent erlotinib, and erlotinib maintenance (38). Of the 62 enrolled patients, 37 were in stage III and 12 were in stage IV. Median PFS was 7.4 months, and OS was 12.9 months for stage III disease, with tolerable toxicity. Lee et al. conducted 2 parallel randomized phase II studies depending on EGFR mutation status (39). EGFR-mutated patients received 3 cycles of erlotinib first and were randomized to either erlotinib with concurrent radiation (60 Gy/30 F) followed by erlotinib for consolidation for 6 cycles or just CCRT with irinotecan-cisplatin. The EGFR unknown or wild-type patients were randomized to receive either 3 cycles of irinotecan-cisplatin before or after CCRT with irinotecan-cisplatin. Longer survival was observed in EGFR-mutated patients, with an excellent 74.8-month median OS, compared with a 25.3-month OS in EGFR wild-type patients (P=0.034). Brain metastasis was more common as the first relapse site in the EGFR-mutated patients compared to those with the EGFR wild-type or unknown mutations, which could may indicate that the addition of EGFR-TKI could better control the extracranial disease.

The ongoing phase II LOGIK0902/OLCSG0905 trial is aimed at analyzing the survival results of 8-week gefitinib followed by docetaxel-cisplatin concurrent radiotherapy (60 Gy/30 F) in 21 patients with unresectable LA NSCLC harboring EGFR mutation (40). The ongoing phase II RTOG 1306 (NCT01822496) trial has randomized EGFR-mutated patients to receive either erlotinib induction for 3 months followed by CCRT or CCRT only. ALK-rearrangement patients have also been randomized in this trial and are described in the next section. The phase III LAURA trial (NCT03521154) will evaluate CCRT followed by osimertinib consolidation in EGFR-mutated unresectable LA NSCLC, while the ongoing observational NCT04304638 trial is exploring the survival differences of 3 treatment strategies (CRT, radiation plus EGFR-TKI, and EGFR-TKI only) based on the real-world data.


ALK-TKIs & CRT

Thus far, only 1 study protocol has begun to explore the treatment of unresectable LA-NSCLC harboring ALK rearrangement. As mentioned above, the ongoing phase II RTOG 1306 (NCT01822496) has also randomized ALK-positive patients to receive either crizotinib induction for 3 months followed by chemotherapy (either cisplatin/etoposide or paclitaxel/carboplatin) plus concurrent radiotherapy (60 Gy/30 F) or CCRT only. The primary outcome measure is PFS, and the final results are highly anticipated.

The data and characteristics from all the published studies mentioned in this review are summarized in Table 1.

Table 1
Table 1 Study characteristics
Full table

Conclusions

Currently, the use of TKIs is not recommended in any practice guidelines or expert consensus for LA-NSCLC patients (41,42). The available data thus far has demonstrated potential benefit from TKIs in EGFR-mutated unresectable LA-NSCLC patient, with no data available for in ALK-positive patients. However, given the lack of strong supporting data, large randomized trials with sufficiently powered arms, accurate patient selection, appropriate duration of TKI therapy, and effective control arms are needed to test whether the benefit of TKIs shown in advanced NSCLC is transferrable to LA-NSCLC patients, in the same way that endocrine therapy has been applied in breast cancer. The addition of TKIs treatment indeed bring about the incidence of adverse events includes rash, esophagitis, pneumonitis and hematological toxicity, but they can be tolerated. For patients safety considerations, we think that patients with good pulmonary function and good condition may benefit more from TKIs treatment. But questions concerning if and when to use chemotherapeutic agents, appropriate radiation dose and volume, and the timing and modality of TKI treatment need to be solved in the future. With the advent of the era of immunotherapy, NSCLC patients have gained considerable survival improvement, but those patients with EGFR- or ALK-positive mutations have seen little benefit (43). Similar to immunotherapy, pneumonia may also occur in TKI treatment, but unlike immunotherapy, TKI treatment has a higher objective response rate and does not have immune-related potentially fatal toxicities. Exploring the efficacy of TKI maintenance in comparison with immunotherapy or the combination of these 2 drugs will have great clinical value. We expect outcomes in the following years will make the treatment of LA-NSCLC with oncogene-driven mutation more accurate and standardized.


Acknowledgments

None.


Footnote

Reporting Checklist: The authors have completed the Narrative review checklist. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/tlcr-20-722

Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/tlcr-20-722). The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Ethical Statement: The authors are accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.

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(English Language Editor: J. Gray)

Cite this article as: Jiang L, Meng X, Zhao X, Xing L, Yu J. Perspective on treatment for unresectable locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer with oncogene-driven mutation: a narrative review. Transl Lung Cancer Res 2020;9(5):2137-2144. doi: 10.21037/tlcr-20-722

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