Efficacy and safety of programmed cell-death-protein-1 and its ligand inhibitors in pretreated patients with epidermal growth-factor receptor-mutated or anaplastic lymphoma kinase-translocated lung adenocarcinoma

This study was undertaken to determine ICI efficacy against epidermal growth-factor receptor (EGFR)/anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)/c-ros oncogene 1 (ROS1)-mutated NSCLC patients in the real-world setting. In this retrospective, multicenter study on adults with ICI-treated EGFR-mutated or ALK- or ROS1-translated NSCLCs, we analyzed clinical characteristics and outcomes: ICI-treatment duration, and progression-free survival (PFS), objective response rate, duration of response, and overall survival (OS) from immunotherapy initiation. Fifty-one NSCLC patients (mean age, 58.0 years) were included from 20 French centers: 61% were never-smokers and 59% were women. Among them, 82% had EGFR-activating mutations, 16% ALK translocations, or 2% ROS1 translocations. Before ICI therapy, patients had received a median of 3 treatment lines (including tyrosine-kinase inhibitor). The median PFS was 2.1 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.5–3.2) months for the entire cohort, 2.2 (95% CI, 1.4–3.2) for EGFR-mutated patients, and 2.4 (95% CI, 2.1–not reached) months for ALK-translocated patients. The median OS was 14.7 (95% CI, 12.1–19.2) months for the entire population and 13.9 (95% CI, 8.8–20.0) and 19.2 (95% CI, 13.1–not reached) months for EGFR-mutated and ALK-translocated patients, respectively. Seven (13.7%) patients were treated with ICI for>9 months. Toxicities were reported in 22% (11/51), including 8% (4/51) grade ≥3. In this real-world setting, analysis of ICI PFS again...
Source: Medicine - Category: Internal Medicine Tags: Research Article: Observational Study Source Type: research