Editorial


Brigatinib, a new treatment option in ALK-rearranged advanced non-small cell lung carcinoma

Etienne Giroux Leprieur, Marie Wislez

Abstract

Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) rearrangement is a rare feature in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), occurring in around 5% of the patients (1). This oncogenic addiction is more frequent in no/light-smokers, in thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF1)-positive adenocarcinoma, with cribriform architecture and ring cells (2). ALK rearrangement—most of the time a translocation with a partner gene—induces the formation of a fusion protein with oncogenic properties. The first targeted therapy developed for ALK-rearranged NSCLC was crizotinib, an ALK tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI). Crizotinib was proved to be superior to chemotherapy in first-line setting in ALK-rearranged NSCLC, with an overall response rate (ORR) of 74% and a progression-free survival (PFS) of 10.9 months (3). Crizotinib in first-line treatment is now widely used. Other ALK TKIs have been developed, as brigatinib. Results of the phase I-II trial published in 2016 showed in 79 advanced NSCLC patients treated with brigatinib an ORR at 75% [72% in previously crizotinib treated patients (n=71)] and a PFS (median) of 13.2 months (4). Safety profile showed specific lung toxicity, occurring at the beginning of the treatment (median 2 days) in 8% of the patients, with incidence increasing with the dose of brigatinib. The ALTA trial, published in May 2017 in Journal of Clinical Oncology by Kim et al. was a phase II trial that randomized patients with advanced ALK-rearranged NSCLC between 2 doses of brigatinib (90 mg daily and 90 mg daily for 7 days then 180 mg daily) (5). The primary endpoint was ORR, and no comparison between the 2 arms was pre-planned. Assuming an ORR ≥35% with a power of 90% and a bilateral alpha risk at 0.025, the study had to include 109 patients per arm. Patients should have an advanced ALK-rearranged NSCLC with progression with crizotinib and a performance status (PS) between 0 and 2. Brain metastases were allowed only if asymptomatic and with stable doses of steroid treatment. Two-hundred and twenty-two patients were randomized [112 patients arm A (90 mg) and 110 patients arm B (90 mg then 180 mg)]. Both arms were well-balanced, with a median age at 54 years, 57% of women, 31% of Asian, 60% of non-smokers, 97% of adenocarcinoma, 69% of brain metastases. ORR (investigator-assessed) was 45% in arm A and 54% in arm B, and disease-control rate was 82% (arm A) and 86% (arm B). Median time to response was 1.8 months (arm A) and 1.9 months (arm B), and duration of response was 13.8 months (arm A) and 11.8 months (arm B). Median PFS was 9.2 months (arm A) and 12.9 months (arm B). Post-hoc comparison between the 2 arms for PFS showed a clear benefit for arm B, with a hazard ratio (HR) at 0.55 [95% confidence interval (CI), 0.36–0.86]. One-year overall survival (OS) probability was 71% (arm A) and 80% (arm B). As shown in the phase I-II trial, brigatinib had intracranial efficacy. ORR for measurable brain metastases was 42% (arm A, n=26) and 67% (arm B, n=18). For active brain metastases (i.e., metastases without previous brain radiotherapy, or progression after brain radiotherapy), intracranial ORR was 42% (arm A, n=19) and 73% (arm B, n=15). Intracranial PFS (median) was 15.6 months (arm A) and 12.8 months (arm B), with a duration of intracranial response (median) not reached in both arms. In term of safety, no new signal was detected. In both arms, main toxicities (≥10% patients) were nausea (33%/40%), diarrhea (19%/38%), vomiting (24%/23%), headache (28%/27%), decrease appetite (22%/15%) and hypertension (11%/21%). Grade 3–4 toxicities were rare: hypertension (6%/6%), increased creatine phosphokinase (3%/9%) and rash (1%/3%), mainly. Pulmonary early toxicity occurred in 6% of patients (n=14), during the first 2 days of treatment (always at 90mg daily of brigatinib). Grade 3–5 pulmonary toxicities concerned 3% of patients (n=7). Half of the patients (n=7) had successfully continued brigatinib after suspension, whereas 7 patients stopped brigatinib definitely. One patient died from acute respiratory failure (<1%). Multivariate analysis showed that advanced age [odds ratio (OR) =2.10; 95% CI, 1.21–3.65] and time from last crizotinib dose to first brigatinib dose less than 7 days (OR =3.88; 95% CI, 1.10–13.68) were associated with early pulmonary toxicity. Seven percent (arm A) and 20% (arm B) patients had dose reduction, due to increase of creatine phosphokinase, pneumonitis and rash.

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