Abstract
Objective The standard therapy after failure of the initial non-first line epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor (EGFR-TKI) treatment in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has not yet been established. The aim of the current study was to identify whether the 2nd TKI treatment or chemotherapy (paclitaxel-containing or non-paclitaxel regimen) is the appropriate treatment for patients with NSCLC based on the efficacy of the initial TKIs.
Methods Seventy-two advanced NSCLC patients who had accepted 2nd TKIs or chemotherapy immediately after failure of the initial TKIs in non-first line setting from May 1, 2004 to January 31, 2010 at the Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center were enrolled. The primary endpoint [2nd progression-free survival (PFS)] and the second endpoint [overall survival (OS)] were compared among the 2nd TKI and chemotherapy groups as well as their subgroups.
Results (1) Twenty-one patients were treated with 2nd TKIs, and 51 patients were administered chemotherapy after failure of the initial non-first line TKI treatment. There was nonsignificant difference in the responses (P=0.900) [2nd PFS (P=0.833) and OS (P=0.369)] between the 2nd TKI and chemotherapy groups. (2) In the 2nd TKI group, 9 patients exhibited PFS≥7 months. The initial TKI treatment group exhibited a longer 2nd PFS than the other 12 patients with an initial PFS<7 months (7 months vs. 2 months, P=0.019). However, these groups had nonsignificantly different OS (P=0.369). (3) In the chemotherapy group, patients with PFS<5 months exhibited longer 2nd PFS than those with PFS ≥ 5 months in the initial TKI treatment (3 months vs. 2 months, P=0.039). (4) In the chemotherapy group, patients treated with paclitaxel-containing regimen showed longer 2nd PFS than those treated with non-paclitaxel regimen (5 months vs. 2.3 months, P=0.043).
Conclusions Patients with PFS≥7 months or <5 months under the initial TKI treatment potentially benefit from the 2nd TKI treatment or chemotherapy immediately after failure of the non-first line TKIs. The paclitaxel-containing regimen may improve the 2nd PFS. However, more patient samples are urgently needed to validate these findings.
keywords
Introduction
Epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (EGFR-TKIs) play an important role in the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), especially in the first line setting where both the objective response rate and progression-free survival (PFS) are better than chemotherapy once the cancer bears the mutant EGFR[1–3]. Moreover, the efficacy of EGFR-TKIs was fully demonstrated in non-first line setting regardless of the status of the EGFR mutation[4–6]. However, a standard regimen after failure of the non-first line TKI therapy has not been established.
Erlotinib is used initially as a salvage treatment option after the failure of gefitinib. In the first phase II clinical trial in this field conducted by Cho et al.[7], the disease control rate (DCR) and response rate (RR) for all patients were 28.6% and 9.5%, respectively. Thus, erlotinib seems to be a potential therapeutic option. However, contradicting results were obtained from another phase II clinical trial with a similar design[8], in which the RR was 4.3% and DCR was 8.7%. Hence, erlotinib should not be given routinely after failure of the gefitinib treatment[9]. However, erlotinib can be an option for a highly selected subset that had benefited from prior gefitinib treatment. This perception is in accordance with those in several other studies[10–12] and is fully confirmed in a pooled analysis of 106 patients. The beneficial population is confined to patients who had shown stable disease (SD) despite gefitinib therapy (P=0.0095) and to patients who had PFS of more than 6 months during gefitinib treatment (P=0.0261)[13]. The success of erlotinib may be attributed to its effectiveness in patients who do not respond well to gefitinib, such as those with negative EGFR mutation, squamous cell carcinoma, or a history of smoking[4]. Moreover, erlotinib is used at its maximum tolerated dose, whereas gefitinib is used only at approximately one-third of its maximum tolerated dose in daily practice. The other targeted agents were researched successfully in several studies, such as the cetuximab[14] and TKIs combined with cytotoxic agents, such as paclitaxel[15]. Although chemotherapy is the standard treatment recommended by the National Comprehensive Cancer Network 2011 for NSCLC after failure of TKIs, there are very limited studies in this field. Platinum-based combination or taxane-containing regimen is associated with a higher therapy response, whereas a platinum-based combination linked to a better OS is found in a retrospective study[16] for a total of 195 patients with Stage IIIb or IV NSCLC receiving first-line gefitinib. The survival of platinum-based combination regimens exist in patients with mutant EGFR but not with wild-type EGFR. The sensitivity of cisplatin, docetaxel, and pemetrexed were tested in two cell lines with acquired resistance to gefitinib. According to Zhou et al.[17], docetaxel or pemetrexed is a more reasonable choice than cisplatin because the overexpression of PI3K, integrin, and DNA restoration gene, as well as the continuous activation of PI3K in this cell line, is found to be correlated with resistance to cisplatin. However, the effectiveness of chemotherapy after failure of the non-first line TKI treatment remains controversial. From the limited clinical data, the alternative strategy between TKIs and cytotoxic chemotherapy is reasonable because the sensitivity of TKIs can be regained following a drug holiday for patients with NSCLC who initially responded to EGFR-TKIs treatment[18] and the EGFR mutation status was changed before and after TKIs treatment[19].
To date, treatment after initial TKIs in NSCLC is still being challenged, such as who will benefit from the retreatment of TKIs and cytotoxic chemotherapy and what kind of cytotoxic combination will provide better performance. To the best of our knowledge, a study to address such concerns has not been conducted. Thus, we retrospectively compared the efficacy of the retreatment of TKIs (2nd TKIs group) and chemotherapy (chemotherapy group) immediately after failure of the initial non-first line TKI treatment in NSCLC, as well as the efficacy of paclitaxel-containing and non-paclitaxel regimens, to determine the criteria for the selection of appropriate patients that must be treated with 2nd TKIs or chemotherapy.
Patients and Methods
Patients
The inclusion criteria for NSCLC patients are as follows: 1) histologically or cytologically proven NSCLC; 2) received the first line standard chemotherapy; 3) failure of the initial non-first line TKI treatment; 4) received TKI therapy or chemotherapy treatment, including paclitaxel-containing or non-paclitaxel regimen from May 1, 2004 to January 31, 2010 at the Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center; and 5) with adequate hematologic and hepatic/renal functions. Seventy-two patients were enrolled in the current study, including 21 patients who were administered 2nd TKI treatment and 51 patients who received chemotherapy immediately after failure of the initial TKI therapy. Fourteen of the 51 patients had been treated with paclitaxel-containing regimen, whereas the other 37 patients received non-paclitaxel regimen. The basic characteristics of the patients are summarized in Table 1.
Treatment
All patients accepted 250 mg/day gefitinib or 150 mg/day erlotinib in the initial TKI treatment until the disease progression. In the following treatment, TKI was administered as previously mentioned, and the cytotoxic agents were administered under the standard dosages and schedules. No systemic chemotherapy was given during gefitinib/erlotinib treatment in any patient, although some received radiotherapy for metastasis after temporary cessation of TKIs, followed by the resumption of TKIs.
Assessment of the response and adverse events
Tumor response was evaluated using radiologic examinations according to the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors[20]. The primary endpoint was the 2nd PFS, which was calculated from the date using the 2nd TKIs or chemotherapy to the first date of disease progression or the date of death. The second endpoint was the OS (starting from the date of diagnosis to the date of death or the last date of follow-up).
Statistical analysis
χ2-test was used to compare the characteristics between the groups, and Kaplan-Meier method was used for survival analysis. P<0.05 was considered statistically significant. All statistical analyses were conducted using the SPSS 16.0 software package.
Results
Efficacy in 2nd TKIs and chemotherapy groups
Seventy-two patients were enrolled in the current study, 21 of whom were treated with 2nd TKIs, and the remaining patients accepted chemotherapy immediately after failure of the initial non-first line TKI treatment. All the baseline or prognostic characteristics, including gender, age, surgery history, radiotherapy history, pathological type, staging of disease, smoking history, responses, and so on, were evaluated prior to comparison of results. Most of these characteristics were re-evaluated in the different groups (Table 1). All characteristics were balanced, except that more male patients were enrolled in the chemotherapy group (P=0.001). There were nonsignificant differences between the 2nd response rates (PR/SD/PD) to the 2nd TKIs or chemotherapy of the two groups. The 2nd PFS and OS were compared in the two groups, which were three months versus three months (P=0.833) and 35.7 months versus 25.3 months (P=0.369), in the 2nd TKIs and chemotherapy groups, respectively. Neither the difference in the 2nd PFS nor OS between the two groups was significant. The OS values of the two groups are shown in Figure 1.
Efficacy in subgroups of the 2nd TKIs group
Of the 21 patients in the 2nd TKI group, 17 patients shifted from gefitinib to erlotinib treatment, whereas the remaining patients were given gefitinib continuously after its failure. These patients were classified based on the PFS values under the initial TKIs that are more than or equal to 7 months (9 patients) and less than 7 months (12 patients). The two subgroups have balanced characteristics (Table 1). The nonsignificantly different response rates between the two subgroups (P=0.171) are listed in Table 1. Only the 2nd PFS between the two subgroups were significantly different (7 months vs. 2 months, P=0.019) (Figure 2). The OS between the two groups was nonsignificantly different (35.6 months vs. 29.3 months, P=0.369).
Efficacy in subgroups of chemotherapy group
The 51 patients in the chemotherapy group were classified based on the PFS values after the initial TKIs that are more than or equal to 5 months (29 patients) and less than 5 months (22 patients), and could be classified as patients who accepted paclitaxel-containing regimen chemotherapy (14 patients) or with non-paclitaxel regimen chemotherapy (37 patients). These groups had balanced characteristics, except that more patients were enrolled in the non-paclitaxel group with a history of radiotherapy (P=0.037) (Table 1). The response rates between the 2 subgroups were nonsignificantly different. Patients with PFS < 5 months showed longer 2nd PFS than patients with PFS ≥ 5 months after the initial TKIs in the chemotherapy group (3 months vs. 2 months, P=0.039) (Figure 3). However, OS between the 2 subgroups was nonsignificantly different (23.5 months vs. 33.0 months, P=0.465). In the chemotherapy group, patients who received paclitaxel-containing regimen showed a longer 2nd PFS than patients treated with non-paclitaxel regimen and the 2nd PFS were 5 months and 2.3 months (P=0.043), respectively (Figure 4). The OS between the two subgroups was nonsignificantly different (35.7 months vs. 23.6 months, P=0.578).
Discussion
Patients who benefited from the retreatment of TKIs immediately after the failure of non-first line TKIs were identified. SD or PFS of more than 6 months in the initial gefitinib treatment[7, 8, 13] was the main predictor of patients who will potentially benefit from erlotinib treatment after failure of gefitinib. Patients who failed gefitinib treatment still benefited from continuous gefitinib-containing regimens[21]. However, the precondition was that patients should get disease control in the initial gefitinib treatment. Considering that most responders failed because of the appearance of new lesions without progression of the pre-existent target lesions[22], the continuous gefitinib treatment could control the pre-existent lesions. Riely et al.[23] found that patients who developed acquired resistance to erlotinib or gefitinib, the stopping TKIs administration resulted in symptomatic progression, increase in standardized uptake value (SUV, max), and increase in tumor size. Interestingly, symptoms improved and SUV (max) decreased after TKIs treatment was restarted. These findings suggest that some tumor cells remain sensitive to EGFR blockade even after acquiring resistance. Beyond these 2 characteristics and using multivariate analysis, Hata et al.[24] found that the good performance status (PS) and insertion of cytotoxic chemotherapies between gefitinib and erlotinib therapies were significantly predictive factors for longer PFS. Considering that poor PS limited the application of erlotinib[24, 25], such as grade 3/4 adverse events found in 16 (43%) of 38 patients with PS 2/3, dose reduction or interruption was performed in 24 (63%) of 38 poor PS patients, and we considered that the dose intensity was insufficient to maintain the promotion of the benefits of erlotinib. Moreover, poor PS was related to low compliance. Patients who obtained a PFS of more than or equal to 7 months from the initial TKIs treatment will benefit from TKIs retreatment immediately after the failure of the initial TKIs. We infer that longer PFS is a better index than SD or PR to evaluate the initial TKI efficacy because longer PFS means longer efficacy, whereas SD or PR usually reflect short-term efficacy. However, longer time to progression (TTP) does not indicate better survival, as demonstrated in the study conducted by Asami et al.[26] Among PR patients, those with TTP<12 months on gefitinib showed significantly longer survival times than those with TTP≥12 months (10.3 months vs. 6.4 months; P=0.04) from erlotinib salvage treatment. Shifting from gefitinib to erlotinib was common and reasonable because of the superiorities of erlotinib in low dependence population selection[4] and maximum tolerated dosage. However, no patients were shifted from erlotinib to gefitinib in the present study.
Patients who benefited from the cytotoxic chemotherapy immediately after the failure of non-first line TKIs were identified. Though the retreatment of TKIs is the focus of studies on the treatment after failure of initial TKIs treatment for NSCLC[7, 8, 13, 24, 25], chemotherapy is the main treatment option once TKIs fails in clinical practice. In the current study, chemotherapy accounted for 70.8% (51/72) and retreatment of TKIs just accounted for 29.2% (21/72). Chemotherapy is the standard option recommended by recent NCCN guidelines for NSCLC patients after failure of the first line TKIs. Although patients with EGFR mutation treated with TKIs in first line achieved longer PFS than chemotherapy, OS in the two groups was similar which could be associated with salvage TK treatment to chemotherapy group and salvage chemotherapy treatment to the TKIs group[1–3]. Wu et al.[16] demonstrated that platinum-based combination or taxane-containing regimen was associated with a higher therapy response after failure of first line TKIs. However, to the best of our knowledge, there are no studies that have investigated whether chemotherapy is the optimal option after failure of non-first line TKIs. The reaction of chemotherapy is possibly different after failure of the first line TKIs and failure of non-first line TKIs because EGFR mutation testing is obligated in first line TKIs treatment. However, this condition is not required in the non-first line TKI treatment[1, 2, 4]. This phenomenon was the reason why only 2.7% (2/72) of patients with known EGFR mutation status was reported. The lower testing of EGFR mutation was also attributed to the fact that all patients in the current study were subjected to initial TKIs before 2009 when IPASS clinical trial was published[1]. The present study had demonstrated that patients administered with a paclitaxel-containing regimen had longer 2nd PFS than those who received non-paclitaxel regimen. More patients in the non-paclitaxel group with radiotherapy history (P=0.037) might have potentially mild influence on the results because the remaining prognostic factors were balanced. Based on the results from Wu et al.[16], the basic research results from Zhou et al.[17], and the current results, paclitaxel-containing regimen may obtain longer 2nd PFS immediately after the failure of non-first line TKI treatment.
Conclusion
Patients with PFS ≥7 months or <5 months after initial TKIs treatment potentially benefit from 2nd TKIs treatment or chemotherapy immediately after the failure of non-first line TKIs. Paclitaxel-containing regimen is a better option. However, studies with more patient samples are urgently needed to validate the findings.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 81071872) and Guangdong Provincial Natural Science Foundation (No. 9151008901000102).
Footnotes
↵Co-first author: Gui-fang Guo
Conflict of Interest Statement No potential conflicts of interest are disclosed.
- Received October 22, 2011.
- Accepted December 16, 2011.
- Copyright: © 2012, Cancer Biology & Medicine
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