Abstract

Before the introduction of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) for a particular subgroup of patients, despite platinum-based combination chemotherapy, the majority of patients affected by non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) did not live longer than one year. With deeper understanding of tumor molecular biology, treatment of NSCLC has progressively entered the era of treatment customization according to tumor molecular characteristics, as well as histology. All this information allowed the development of personalized molecular targeted therapies. A series of studies have shown that, in some cases, cancer cells can grow and survive as result of the presence of a single driver genomic abnormality. This phenomenon, called oncogene-addiction, more often occurs in adenocarcinoma histology, in non-smokers (except BRAF mutations, also frequent in smoking patients), young, and female patients. Several different driver mutations have been identified and many studies have clearly shown that upfront TKI monotherapy may improve the overall outcome of these patients. The greater efficacy of these drugs is also associated with a better tolerability and safety than chemotherapy, with fewer side effects and an extremely good compliance to treatment. The most frequent oncogene-addicted disease is represented by those tumors carrying a mutation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). The development of first, second and third generation TKIs against EGFR mutations have dramatically changed the prognosis of these patients. Currently, osimertinib (which demonstrated to improve efficacy with a better tolerability in comparison with first-generation TKIs) is considered the best treatment option for patients affected by NSCLC harboring a common EGFR mutation. EML4-ALK-driven disease (which gene re-arrangement occurs in 3–7% of NSCLC), has demonstrated to be significantly targeted by specific TKIs, which have improved outcome in comparison with chemotherapy. To date, alectinib is considered the best treatment option for these patients, with other newer agents upcoming. Other additional driver abnormalities, such as ROS1, BRAF, MET, RET and NTRK, have been identified as a target mirroring peculiar vulnerability to specific agents. Oncogene-addicted disease typically has a low early resistance rate, but late acquired resistance always develops and therefore therapy needs to be changed when progression occurs. In this narrative review, the state of art of scientific literature about targeted therapy options in oncogene-addicted disease is summarized and critically discussed. We also aim to analyze future perspectives to maximize benefits for this subgroup of patients.

Highlights

  • Before the introduction of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) for a particular subgroup of patients, despite platinum-based combination chemotherapy, the majority of patients affected by non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) did not live longer than one year

  • Before introducing tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), the overall survival (OS) of most patients with advanced NSCLC receiving platinum-based combination chemotherapy was less than one year [2]

  • The progression-free survival (PFS) benefit was confirmed only in the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutation-positive subgroup, while in the EGFR mutation-negative subgroup TKI was inferior to chemotherapy

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Summary

Oncogene Addiction

Non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is the main cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide [1]. TP53 (and perhaps other tumor suppressor genes) may affect the efficacy of traditional targeted therapy in molecularly-addicted NSCLC patients by triggering cell proliferation and passing the oncogenic power of the EGFR pathway [27,28,29]. To summarize, both TP53 mutations and TMB may be considered predictors of TKIs efficacy in oncogene-addicted disease [11,27,29].

EGFR Mutations
ALK Translocations
ROS1 Rearrangements
BRAF Mutations
MET Alterations
RET Mutations
NRTK Rearrangements
HER2 Aberrations
Findings
10. Conclusions

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