Figure S1. Accrual and follow-up1 from Safety, Efficacy, and Biomarker Analysis of Crizotinib in MET-Mutated Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer—Results from the Drug Rediscovery Protocol
posted on 2024-12-02, 08:22authored byKarlijn Verkerk, Tijmen J.W.T. van der Wel, Laurien J. Zeverijn, Birgit S. Geurts, Ilse A.C. Spiekman, Gijs F. de Wit, Paul Roepman, Anne M.L. Jansen, Vincent van der Noort, Egbert F. Smit, Ann Hoeben, Lizza E.L. Hendriks, Michel M. van den Heuvel, Berber Piet, Gerarda J.M. Herder, Sayed M.S. Hashemi, Hans Gelderblom, Henk M.W. Verheul, Emile E. Voest, Adrianus J. de Langen
Flowchart of the accrual and follow-up of the cohort. Abbreviations: NSCLC, non small cell lung cancer.
Funding
Stelvio for Life
Dutch Cancer Society (KWF)
History
ARTICLE ABSTRACT
To provide patients with MET-mutated advanced non–small cell lung cancer (METmut aNSCLC) access to crizotinib, further substantiate evidence of its efficacy and safety in this setting, and find potential biomarkers for nonresponse.
In the Drug Rediscovery Protocol (NCT0295234), patients with an actionable molecular profile are treated with off-label registered drugs. Both treated and untreated patients with aNSCLC harboring MET exon 14 skipping or other MET mutations received crizotinib 250 mg BID until disease progression or intolerable toxicity. Primary endpoints were clinical benefit [CB: RECIST v1.1 confirmed partial response, complete response (CR), or stable disease ≥16 weeks] and safety. Patients were enrolled using a Simon-like two-stage design, with eight patients in stage I and if ≥1/8 patients had CB, 24 patients in stage II. Whole-genome sequencing and RNA sequencing were performed on baseline biopsies.
Between September 2018 and October 2022, 30 patients started treatment, and 24 were response-evaluable after completing ≥1 full treatment cycle. Two patients (8.3%) achieved CR, 13 (54.2%) partial response, and two (8.3%) stable disease. The CB rate was 70.8% [95% confidence interval (CI), 48.9–87.4], and the objective response rate was 62.5% (95% CI, 40.6–81.2). After 21.2-month median follow-up, median duration of response, progression-free survival, and overall survival were 9.3 (95% CI, 6.5–not available), 10.2 (95% CI, 6.0–20.1), and 13.0 months (95% CI, 9.0–not available), respectively. Twenty-three treatment-related grade ≥ 3 adverse events occurred in 12/30 patients (40%), causing treatment discontinuation in three (10%). One patient (achieving CR) had a tyrosine kinase domain mutation (p.H1094Y), and all other patients had MET exon 14 skipping mutations.
Crizotinib is a valuable treatment option in METmut aNSCLC.