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Phase II study of crizotinib in east asian patients with ROS1-positive advanced non–small-cell lung cancer

Cited 202 time in Web of Science Cited 237 time in Scopus
Authors

Wu, Yi-Long; Yang, James Chih-Hsin; Kim, Dong-Wan; Lu, Shun; Zhou, Jianying; Seto, Takashi; Yang, Jin-Ji; Yamamoto, Noboru; Ahn, Myung-Ju; Takahashi, Toshiaki; Yamanaka, Takeharu; Kemner, Allison; Roychowdhury, Debasish; Paolini, Jolanda; Usari, Tiziana; Wilner, Keith D.; Goto, Koichi

Issue Date
2018-05
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology
Citation
Journal of Clinical Oncology, Vol.36 No.14, pp.1405-1411
Abstract
PurposeApproximately 1% to 2% of non-small-cell lung cancers (NSCLCs) harbor a c-ros oncogene 1 (ROS1) rearrangement. Crizotinib, an inhibitor of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK), ROS1, and MET, has shown marked antitumor activity in a small expansion cohort of patients with ROS1-positive advanced NSCLC from an ongoing phase I study. We assessed the efficacy and safety of crizotinib in the largest cohort of patients with ROS1-positive advanced NSCLC.Patients and MethodsThis phase II, open-label, single-arm trial enrolled East Asian patients with ROS1-positive (assessed through validated AmoyDx assay [Amoy Diagnostics, Xiamen, China] at three regional laboratories) advanced NSCLC who had received three or fewer lines of prior systemic therapies. Patients were to receive oral crizotinib at a starting dose of 250 mg twice daily and continued treatment until Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) version 1.1-defined progression (by independent radiology review [IRR]), unacceptable toxicity, or withdrawal of consent. The primary end point was objective response rate (ORR) by IRR.ResultsIn the efficacy and safety analyses, 127 patients were included, with 49.6% still receiving treatment at data cutoff. ORR by IRR was 71.7% (95% CI, 63.0% to 79.3%), with 17 complete responses and 74 partial responses. ORRs were similar irrespective of the number of prior lines of therapy, and responses were durable (median duration of response, 19.7 months; 95% CI, 14.1 months to not reached). Median progression-free survival by IRR was 15.9 months (95% CI, 12.9 to 24.0 months). No new safety signals associated with crizotinib were reported.ConclusionThis study demonstrated clinically meaningful benefit and durable responses with crizotinib in East Asian patients with ROS1-positive advanced NSCLC. Crizotinib was generally well tolerated, with a safety profile consistent with previous reports.
ISSN
0732-183X
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/165228
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1200/JCO.2017.75.5587
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