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Long-term benefit of sotorasib in patients with KRAS G12C-mutated non-small-cell lung cancer: plain language summary

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Authors

Dy, Grace K.; Govindan, Ramaswamy; Velcheti, Vamsidhar; Falchook, Gerald S.; Italiano, Antoine; Wolf, Juergen; Sacher, Adrian G.; Takahashi, Toshiaki; Ramalingam, Suresh S.; Dooms, Christophe; Kim, Dong-Wan; Addeo, Alfredo; Desai, Jayesh; Schuler, Martin; Tomasini, Pascale; Hong, David S.; Lito, Piro; Tran, Qui; Jones, Simon; Anderson, Abraham; Hindoyan, Antreas; Snyder, Wendy; Skoulidis, Ferdinandos; Li, Bob T.

Issue Date
2024-01
Publisher
Future Medicine Ltd.
Citation
Future Oncology, Vol.20 No.3, pp.113-120
Abstract
What is this summary about?This is a plain language summary of a study called CodeBreaK 100. The CodeBreaK 100 study included patients with non-small-cell lung cancer that had spread outside the lung (advanced). Lung cancer is one of the most common forms of cancer.CodeBreaK 100 specifically looked at patients with a particular change(mutation) in the KRAS gene resulting in the mutated protein called KRAS G12C. The KRAS G12C mutation can lead to development and growth of lung cancer.Patients received a treatment called sotorasib, which has accelerated approval or full approval in over 50 countries for patients with non-small-cell lung cancer with the KRAS G12C mutation.The CodeBreaK 100 study looked at whether sotorasib is a safe and effective treatment for advanced non-small-cell lung cancer. Sotorasib is designed to specifically target and lock the mutated KRAS protein in the inactive state to treat non-small-cell lung cancer.What were the results? In total, 174 adults were treated with sotorasib. Treatment-related side effects were seen in 70% of patients and were severe in 21% of patients. The most common side effects included diarrhea, increased liver enzymes, nausea and tiredness. 70 (41%) patients responded to sotorasib and 144 (84%) patients had tumors that either remained stable or shrunk in size. 29 (41%) patients who responded to sotorasib responded for over 12 months. After 2 years, 9 patients with a response remained on sotorasib; there were no notable increases in tumor size or development of new tumors over this time. There were 5patients who received sotorasib for more than 2 years and continued to respond. Long-term benefit was seen for some patients. Patients also benefitted from treatment when the tumor expressed different amounts of a protein called PD-L1.In total, 33% of patients were still alive after 2 years.What do the results mean? Results show the long-term benefit of sotorasib therapy for people with advanced KRAS G12C-mutated non-small-cell lung cancer. Clinical Trial Registration: NCT03600883 (CodeBreaK 100) (ClinicalTrials.gov)What do the results mean? Results show the long-term benefit of sotorasib therapy for people with advanced KRAS G12C-mutated non-small-cell lung cancer.
ISSN
1479-6694
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/198780
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2217/fon-2023-0560
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