Abstract

BackgroundEntrectinib is a tropomyosin receptor kinase inhibitor approved for the treatment of neurotrophic tyrosine receptor kinase (NTRK) fusion-positive solid tumours based on single-arm trials. Traditional randomised clinical trials in rare cancers are not feasible; we conducted an intrapatient analysis to evaluate the clinical benefit of entrectinib versus prior standard-of-care systemic therapies.MethodsPatients with locally advanced/metastatic NTRK fusion-positive tumours enrolled in the global phase II, single-arm STARTRK-2 trial were grouped according to prior systemic therapy and response. The key analysis used growth modulation index [GMI; ratio of progression-free survival (PFS) on entrectinib to time to discontinuation (TTD) on the most recent prior therapy]; ratio ≥1.3 indicated clinically meaningful efficacy. Additional analyses investigated TTD and objective response rate (ORR) for entrectinib and prior therapies.ResultsSeventy-one patients were included; 51 received prior systemic therapy. In 38 patients who progressed on prior therapy, ORR was 60.5% (23/38) with entrectinib and 15.8% (6/38) with the most recent prior therapy. Median PFS [11.2 months; 95% confidence interval (CI) 6.7–not estimable] for entrectinib exceeded median TTD (2.9 months; 95% CI 2.0-4.9) for most recent prior therapy. From the intrapatient analysis of GMI, 65.8% had a ratio ≥1.3 and median GMI was 2.53. Consistent results were observed at more stringent GMI thresholds; 60.5% of patients had GMI ≥1.5 or ≥1.8 and 57.9% had GMI ≥2.0.ConclusionsORR was high and PFS was longer on entrectinib versus TTD on prior therapy. Furthermore, 65.8% of patients experienced clinically meaningful benefit based on GMI. This intrapatient analysis demonstrates comparative effectiveness of entrectinib in a rare, heterogeneous adult population.

Highlights

  • Randomised clinical trials are the gold standard for assessing the clinical efficacy and safety of new drugs

  • growth modulation index (GMI) does not consider the impact of treatment on patient symptoms and quality of life, a phase II clinical trial reported strong correlation between a GMI >1.33 and improved response to treatment, longer median overall survival, and progression-free survival (PFS), compared with a GMI 1.33.15 Most patients (n 1⁄4 17; 68.0%) in our study with a GMI 1.3 were responders to entrectinib, but there were six patients classed as nonresponders and two patients who died before being evaluated

  • We investigated intrapatient comparisons of response rates, PFS, time to discontinuation (TTD), and GMI on entrectinib and prior therapy to investigate comparative efficacy in patients with neurotrophic tyrosine receptor kinase (NTRK) fusion-positive, locally advanced/metastatic solid cancers

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Summary

Introduction

Randomised clinical trials are the gold standard for assessing the clinical efficacy and safety of new drugs. Standard approaches to assessing response to therapy in clinical trials, that is, reduction in size of target lesions using RECIST, may need to be reconsidered in this setting. It was noted that a large proportion of patients discontinued MTA therapy as, despite a reduction in tumour growth rate while on treatment, RECIST response criteria were not met.[1]. Traditional randomised clinical trials in rare cancers are not feasible; we conducted an intrapatient analysis to evaluate the clinical benefit of entrectinib versus prior standard-of-care systemic therapies. The key analysis used growth modulation index [GMI; ratio of progression-free survival (PFS) on entrectinib to time to discontinuation (TTD) on the most recent prior therapy]; ratio 1.3 indicated clinically meaningful efficacy. 65.8% of patients experienced clinically meaningful benefit based on GMI This intrapatient analysis demonstrates comparative effectiveness of entrectinib in a rare, heterogeneous adult population.

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