학술논문

Efficacy and safety exposure-response analyses of entrectinib in patients with advanced or metastatic solid tumors.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Cancer Chemotherapy & Pharmacology. Mar2022, Vol. 89 Issue 3, p363-372. 10p.
Subject
*NON-small-cell lung carcinoma
*TUMORS
*METASTASIS
*LUNG cancer
*PROTEINS
*RESEARCH
*PROTEIN kinase inhibitors
*HETEROCYCLIC compounds
*RESEARCH methodology
*LUNG tumors
*EVALUATION research
*COMPARATIVE studies
*SECONDARY primary cancer
*TRANSFERASES
*PROTEIN-tyrosine kinases
*BENZAMIDE
Language
ISSN
0344-5704
Abstract
Purpose: Entrectinib is an anti-cancer agent that inhibits TRKA/B/C, ROS1, and ALK. Secondary pharmacokinetic (PK) exposure parameters for entrectinib derived from a previously described population PK model were used to characterize exposure-response relationships in patients treated with entrectinib.Methods: Data were pooled from Phase 1 and 2 studies of entrectinib (600-800 mg/day in adults, 250-750 mg/m2/day in children) in 293 patients with NTRK-, ROS1-, or ALK-positive, locally advanced or metastatic tumors. Efficacy was evaluated by the changes in sum of target lesion diameters and best overall response defined by RECIST1.1. A longitudinal nonlinear mixed-effect model described the relationship between entrectinib exposure and tumor size data in patients with ROS1-positive non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) or NTRK fusion-positive solid tumors. The relationship between exposure and treatment-emergent (TEAEs) or serious (SAEs) adverse events was assessed by logistic regression in all patients for whom secondary PK parameter estimates were derived.Results: Among the 89 patients with evaluable efficacy data included in the exposure-efficacy analysis, 73% (65/89) achieved a complete or partial response. Entrectinib exposure distribution was similar in responders and non-responders. Model-described tumor shrinkage rates were 8-12 times greater than growth rates in both ROS-1-positive NSCLC patients and NTRK fusion-positive solid tumor patients, with no relationship between exposure and these rates. The probability of experiencing a Grade ≥ 3 TEAE or SAE increased with exposure, primarily at doses > 600 mg/day.Conclusion: These analyses supported that entrectinib at 600 mg/day provides an acceptable benefit-risk ratio in adults with NTRK-, ROS1-, or ALK-positive tumors, considered as rare disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]