Pfizer Inc's Xalkori, which treats lung cancer patients with a
specific gene mutation, proved effective in shrinking tumors in those with an
even rarer form of the disease, according to data presented at a medical
meeting on Saturday, September 27, 2014.
In
the study of 50 non-small cell lung cancer patients with a rearrangement of the
ROS1 gene, Xalkori treatment led to significant tumor shrinkage in 36 of them,
or 72 percent, and halted tumor growth in an additional 9 patients, researchers
reported.
Xalkori,
known chemically as crizotinib, was approved to treat patients with a mutation
of the ALK gene, along with a companion diagnostic test to identify those with
the mutation, which accounts for about 4 percent of Non-Small Cell Lung Cancers
(NSCLC).
About 1 to 2 percent of NSCLC patients are believed to be ROS1
positive - the result of a fusion of two genes that are usually separate.
This
is the first definitive study to establish crizotinib's activity in a large
group of patients with ROS1-positive lung cancer and confirms that ROS1 is a
bona fide therapeutic target in those patients.
The
average duration of response to the oral drug taken twice daily was 17 months,
and half of the patients were still receiving treatment with no evidence of
tumor progression, researchers said.
The
remissions induced by crizotinib in ROS1-positive patients are quite prolonged,
and (treatment) resistance appears to emerge much later, on average, than what
we have seen with other targeted therapies for lung cancer and melanoma.
The
study was presented at the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) meeting
in Madrid and published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Advances
in diagnostic tools and the understanding of human genetics have enabled
doctors to identify patients with the ROS1 mutation.
This
is a great example of success in personalized medicine, and besides the results are "incredibly
important for ROS patients."
While
ROS1-positive NSCLC patients are rare, Iafrate said, "if you devote the
diagnostic laboratory resources to find that 1 to 2 percent of patients, you
will make a real difference."
Xalkori
is not yet approved to treat ROS1-positive patients.
"Pfizer
continues to support clinical research of Xalkori in patients with ROS1 rearrangements
to better understand the compound's activity in this population," the
company said in a statement.
There
are an estimated 1.5 million new cases of NSCLC worldwide each year.
References:
1. Dr. Alice Shaw, the study's lead investigator from the Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center in Boston
2. Fox News
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