Updated overall efficacy and safety of selpercatinib in patients (pts) with RET fusion+ non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)

Autor: Juergen Wolf, Guzman Alonso, Pearl Plernjit French, Victoria Soldatenkova, Keunchil Park, Vivek Subbiah, Benjamin Besse, Daniel Shao-Weng Tan, Alexander Drilon, Aimee K. Lin, Oliver Gautschi, Filippo de Braud, Koichi Goto, Benjamin Solomon
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Clinical Oncology. 39:9065-9065
ISSN: 1527-7755
0732-183X
DOI: 10.1200/jco.2021.39.15_suppl.9065
Popis: 9065 Background: Selpercatinib, a first-in-class highly selective and potent, CNS-active RET kinase inhibitor, is approved in multiple countries for treatment of RET fusion+ lung or thyroid cancers. Here we report an update of efficacy and safety results which provide a longer follow up and increased number of patients (safety population: N = 345 vs N = 329). Methods: Pts with RET fusion+ NSCLC enrolled in the global, multicenter, ongoing LIBRETTO-001 trial (NCT03157128; 16 countries, 89 sites) were included in this analysis. Pts with the opportunity to be followed ≥6 months from their first dose were included in the efficacy-evaluable population for these analyses. Integrated analysis set (IAS) included 218 NSCLC pts with prior platinum-chemotherapy. Primary analysis set (PAS) was a subset of the IAS and included the first 105 consecutively enrolled pts. The treatment-naïve population included 48 efficacy-evaluable pts. Primary endpoint was objective response rate (ORR, RECIST v1.1) by independent review committee (IRC). Secondary endpoints included ORR by investigator, duration of response (DoR), progression-free survival (PFS), clinical benefit rate (CBR; CR+PR+SD ≥16 weeks), and safety. Safety population (N = 345) included all pts with NSCLC who received ≥1 selpercatinib dose by data cutoff (30 Mar 2020). Results: In pts with prior treatment (N = 218) and treatment-naïve (N = 48) pts, 56% and 60% were female, with a median pt age of 61 and 64 years, respectively. The ORR with selpercatinib was 57% in the IAS, 64% in the PAS, and 85% in the treatment-naïve population (Table). In both the IAS and PAS, the median DoR was 17.5 months, median PFS was 19.3 months at median follow-up of 12.0 and 15.7 months, respectively (Table). The most common treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) reported in ≥25% of pts were dry mouth, diarrhea, hypertension, increased ALT/AST, edema peripheral, and fatigue. Twenty-five pts (7%) permanently discontinued due to TEAEs, with 10 pts (3%) discontinuing selpercatinib due to treatment-related AEs as per investigator. Conclusions: In this updated data set, selpercatinib continued to demonstrate durable antitumor activity in pts with RET-fusion+ NSCLC. Selpercatinib was well-tolerated with a safety profile consistent with previous reports. A global, randomized, phase 3 trial (LIBRETTO-431) evaluating selpercatinib compared with standard frontline therapy is ongoing. Clinical trial information: NCT03157128. [Table: see text]
Databáze: OpenAIRE