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T. Bauer



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    MINI 30 - New Kinase Targets (ID 157)

    • Event: WCLC 2015
    • Type: Mini Oral
    • Track: Treatment of Advanced Diseases - NSCLC
    • Presentations: 1
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      MINI30.09 - Clinical Response to Entrectinib in a Patient with NTRK1-Rearranged Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) (ID 2913)

      18:30 - 20:00  |  Author(s): T. Bauer

      • Abstract
      • Presentation
      • Slides

      Background:
      Chromosomal rearrangements involving neurotrophic tyrosine kinase 1 (NTRK1) occur in less than 1% of NSCLCs. Cell-based assays have demonstrated that NTRK1 rearrangement leads to expression of an oncogenic TrkA fusion protein. While inhibition of TrkA in preclinical models reduces TrkA auto-phosphorylation and cell proliferation, the clinical activity of TrkA inhibitors in NSCLCs harboring an NTRK1 fusion is not known. Entrectinib (RXDX-101) is an orally available tyrosine kinase inhibitor of TrkA, TrkB, TrkC, ROS1, and ALK, with IC50 values for kinase inhibition ≤ 2 nM.

      Methods:
      We used an anchored multiplex polymerase chain reaction (AMP) assay to screen for NTRK1 rearrangements (Zheng et al., Nature Medicine 2014). Among over 663 NSCLC cases screened, we identified one positive case in which the 3’ end of SQSTM1 exon 6 was fused to the 5’ end of NTRK1 exon 10, leading to an SQSTM1-NTRK1 fusion transcript. We enrolled the patient onto the Phase 1 dose escalation study of entrectinib in adult patients with locally advanced or metastatic tumors (NCT02097810). The dose of entrectinib was 400 mg/m[2] (750 mg) once daily. We assessed safety of entrectinib and response to treatment using RECIST 1.1.

      Results:
      The patient is a 46 yo male with a 30 pack year smoking history who was first diagnosed with metastatic NSCLC in November 2013. Prior therapies included carboplatin/pemetrexed, pembrolizumab, docetaxel, and vinorelbine. At the time of study enrollment, the patient had an ECOG performance status of 2 and required supplemental oxygen at a rate of 3 liters per minute by nasal cannula. He reported significant pain and dyspnea due to widely metastatic disease, including a large left hilar mass narrowing the left upper lobe bronchus and obstructing the left lower lobe bronchus, extensive and palpable neck and chest lymphadenopathy, and a palpable expansile left chest wall mass. Staging head CT also revealed numerous (15 to 20) asymptomatic brain metastases measuring up to 1.7 cm that had not been previously treated. The patient was started on entrectinib and tolerated the study medication well, with one adverse event of grade 1 dysgeusia, which resolved after two weeks. Within three weeks of starting treatment, the patient reported resolution of dyspnea and pain, and improvement in energy and appetite. He no longer required supplemental oxygen and all sites of palpable disease had improved or resolved. At four weeks of treatment, restaging CT scans demonstrated a partial response by RECIST of -47%, with significant regression or resolution of lymphadenopathy, reduction in size of the chest wall mass, and marked reexpansion of the left lung. Restaging of the CNS by head CT demonstrated near complete resolution of previously visualized brain metastases.

      Conclusion:
      In a heavily pre-treated patient with NSCLC harboring an NTRK1 gene fusion, entrectinib therapy resulted in rapid clinical improvement and a radiologic partial response at 4 weeks with minimal toxicity. This preliminary report suggests that entrectinib may be an effective therapy for patients with NTRK1-rearranged NSCLC.

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    ORAL 02 - PD1 Axis Immunotherapy 2 (ID 87)

    • Event: WCLC 2015
    • Type: Oral Session
    • Track: Treatment of Advanced Diseases - NSCLC
    • Presentations: 1
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      ORAL02.02 - Safety and Efficacy of Nivolumab in an Ongoing Trial of a PD-L1+/- Patient Population with Metastatic Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (ID 851)

      10:45 - 12:15  |  Author(s): T. Bauer

      • Abstract
      • Presentation
      • Slides

      Background:
      Nivolumab (NIVO), a fully human IgG4 programmed death-1 (PD-1), immune checkpoint inhibitor antibody, has demonstrated durable responses and tolerability in heavily pretreated patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). NIVO was recently approved for the treatment of patients with metastatic squamous (SQ) NSCLC with progression on or after platinum-based chemotherapy. Conducted mostly in community-based oncology centers, this ongoing trial explores the safety of NIVO in patients with previously-treated PD-L1[+/-] metastatic SQ or non-squamous (NSQ) NSCLC.

      Methods:
      Eligible patients are enrolled in 4 subgroups: 1) SQ, performance status (PS) 0–1, ≥2 prior therapies; 2) SQ, PS 0–1, 1 prior therapy; 3) NSQ, PS 0–1, ≥1 prior therapy; and 4) SQ or NSQ, PS 2, ≥1 prior therapy. Patients with both PD-L1[+] and PD-L1[-] tumors are eligible. Patients receive NIVO 3 mg/kg IV (60 minutes) Q2W either until progressive disease (PD)/unacceptable toxicity (Cohort A) or for 1 year with the possibility of retreatment upon disease progression (Cohort B). Primary objective is to estimate incidence of high-grade (CTCAE v4.0 Grade 3–4 and 5), select treatment-related adverse events (STRAEs); exploratory efficacy assessments include ORR, PFS, and OS.

      Results:
      From 4/16/14 to 12/31/14, 824 patients were treated and have demographic and safety data available; 483 patients remained on study as of 12/31/2014. 395 patients had evaluable radiographic tumor assessments at first assessment (Week 9). Demographics, safety, and tumor response by PD-L1 status are reported. Figure 1



      Conclusion:
      Safety and tolerability are consistent with prior NIVO experience and no new safety signals have been identified in this trial of SQ/NSQ NSCLC patients. Immune-related toxicities are manageable in a community practice setting using previously-developed safety algorithms. The frequency of STRAEs of interest was similar between patients with PS 0–1 and those with PS 2. Early data from this large, multicenter trial suggests that patients with pretreated advanced NSCLC benefit from NIVO therapy regardless of tumor PD-L1 status, histology type, and PS status.

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