scholarly journals Treatment of Rare Mutations in Patients with Lung Cancer

Biomedicines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 534
Author(s):  
Tarek Taha ◽  
Rasha Khoury ◽  
Ronen Brenner ◽  
Haitam Nasrallah ◽  
Irena Shofaniyeh ◽  
...  

Lung cancer is a worldwide prevalent malignancy. This disease has a low survival rate due to diagnosis at a late stage challenged by the involvement of metastatic sites. Non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is presented in 85% of cases. The last decade has experienced substantial advancements in scientific research, leading to a novel targeted therapeutic approach. The newly developed pharmaceutical agents are aimed towards specific mutations, detected in individual patients inflicted by lung cancer. These drugs have longer and improved response rates compared to traditional chemotherapy. Recent studies were able to identify rare mutations found in pulmonary tumors. Among the gene alterations detected were mesenchymal epithelial transition factor (MET), human epidermal growth factor 2 (HER2), B-type Raf kinase (BRAF), c-ROS proto-oncogene (ROS1), rearranged during transfection (RET) and neurotrophic tyrosine kinase (NTRK). Ongoing clinical trials are gaining insight onto possible first and second lines of medical treatment options intended to enable progression-free survival to lung cancer patients.

2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 9096-9096
Author(s):  
Abdoulaye Karaboué ◽  
Thierry Collon ◽  
Ida Pavese ◽  
Viviane Bodiguel ◽  
Elda Zakine ◽  
...  

9096 Background: Nivolumab (NIV) is a Programmed-cell-Death-1 inhibitor approved as 2nd line treatment for metastatic Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC). NIV mainly targets T(CD8) cells, whose functions and trafficking are regulated by circadian clocks (Nobis et al. PNAS 2019), hence suggesting possible dosing time-dependent changes in NIV efficacy. Methods: Consecutive metastatic NSCLC patients (pts) received single agent NIV (240 mg iv q 2 weeks) at a single institution. NIV timing slots were randomly allocated for each course by the day hospital coordinator on a logistics basis and recorded. The median NIV timing and its intra-pt coefficient of variation (CVar) were computed over the whole treatment span. The study population was split into two NIV timing groups based upon the median value of the median treatment times of all the pts. CTCAE-toxicity rates were compared between groups with c2 or Fisher exact. Progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were compared between both NIV timing groups with Log Rank. Results: From 9/2015 to 11/2020, the study accrued 95 stage 4 NSCLC pts (males, 83%; PS 0-1, 96%), aged 41-83 years (median, 67). Primary histological types were adenocarcinoma (55 pts, 58%), squamous cell carcinoma (37 pts, 39%) or unspecified (3 pts, 3%). The pts had a median of 4 metastatic sites, including bone (52% of the pts), pleura (41%), liver (25%), brain (24%) and adrenal gland (20%). A total of 1818 NIV courses were given as 2nd line for 72 pts (76%), or as 3rd or later line for 22 pts (23%). Median PFS and OS (months, mo.) were 3.9 mo. [95% CL, 2.1 – 5.8], and 14.0 mo. [9.5 – 18.4] respectively, for the 95 pts. The majority of NIV administrations occurred between 9:27 and 12:54 for 48 pts (‘morning’ group) and between 12:55 and 17:14 for 47 pts (‘afternoon’ group), with intra-pt NIV timing CVar ranging from 2% to 21% (median, 10%). Main pts characteristics were similar for both groups, except for fewer females (8% vs 26%) and younger age (median, 66 vs 69 years) in the ‘morning’ group compared to the ‘afternoon’ one. Grade 3-4 fatigue, anorexia or myalgias were less in the ‘morning’ group compared with the “afternoon’ one (6% vs 15%; 2% vs 6%; 0% vs 4%, respectively). Strikingly, median PFS [95% CI] were 11.3 mo. [5.5 - 17.1] for the ‘morning’ group as compared to 3.1 mo. [1.5 - 4.6] for the ‘afternoon’ one (p<0.001). Median OS were 34.2 mo. [15.1 - 53.3] for the ‘morning’ group vs 9.6 mo. [4.9 - 14.4] for the ‘afternoon’ group (p<0.001). Multivariate analyses identified NIV ‘morning’ timing and 2nd line administration, as significant independent predictors of longer PFS and OS. Conclusions: NIV was both less toxic and four times as effective following ‘morning’ as compared to ‘afternoon’ dosing in this study in Stage 4 NSCLC pts, possibly as a result of dosing time-dependent pharmacology. Translational and clinical nivolumab timing validation studies are needed, in order to optimize pts benefits from cancer immunotherapy.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 734-748 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baoling Guo ◽  
Qiuxiang Zheng

Aim and Objective: Lung cancer is a highly heterogeneous cancer, due to the significant differences in molecular levels, resulting in different clinical manifestations of lung cancer patients there is a big difference. Including disease characterization, drug response, the risk of recurrence, survival, etc. Method: Clinical patients with lung cancer do not have yet particularly effective treatment options, while patients with lung cancer resistance not only delayed the treatment cycle but also caused strong side effects. Therefore, if we can sum up the abnormalities of functional level from the molecular level, we can scientifically and effectively evaluate the patients' sensitivity to treatment and make the personalized treatment strategies to avoid the side effects caused by over-treatment and improve the prognosis. Result & Conclusion: According to the different sensitivities of lung cancer patients to drug response, this study screened out genes that were significantly associated with drug resistance. The bayes model was used to assess patient resistance.


Immunotherapy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonello Veccia ◽  
Vincenzo Sforza ◽  
Emanuela Vattemi ◽  
Alessandro Inno ◽  
Stefania Kinspergher ◽  
...  

Background: To investigate the role of pretreatment lung immune prognostic index (LIPI) as biomarker in PD-L1 ≥50% non-small-cell lung cancer patients receiving pembrolizumab. Patients & methods: We retrospectively identified 117 patients, divided into 3 prognostic groups according to LIPI score. For each patient, we evaluated 1-year overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival rate. C-statistic and survival receiver operating characteristic curves were used to study discrimination of LIPI. Results: After a median follow-up of 11.7 months, 1-year OS rate was 60.1%, 35.3% and 28.6%, while 1-year progression-free survival rate was 39.1%, 20.6% and 14.3% in good, intermediate and poor LIPI groups, respectively (p < 0.001). The c-statistic and area under the curve of LIPI were 0.63 and 0.662 for OS and 1-year OS, respectively. Conclusions: Higher LIPI score is related to worse survival in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer patients treated with first-line pembrolizumab. However, based on c-statistic and area under the curve, LIPI does not represent a good prognostic survival model.


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