Safety and efficacy of first‐line dacomitinib in Japanese patients with advanced non‐small cell lung cancer

  • Makoto Nishio
    Department of Thoracic Medical Oncology The Cancer Institute Hospital Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research Tokyo Japan
  • Terufumi Kato
    Department of Thoracic Oncology Kanagawa Cancer Center Kanagawa Japan
  • Seiji Niho
    Department of Thoracic Oncology National Cancer Center Hospital East Chiba Japan
  • Noboru Yamamoto
    Department of Experimental Therapeutics National Cancer Center Hospital Tokyo Japan
  • Toshiaki Takahashi
    Division of Thoracic Oncology Shizuoka Cancer Center Shizuoka Japan
  • Naoyuki Nogami
    Department of Thoracic Oncology National Hospital Organization Shikoku Cancer Center Ehime Japan
  • Hiroyasu Kaneda
    Department of Clinical Oncology Graduate School of Medicine Osaka City University Osaka Japan
  • Yuka Fujita
    Department of Respiratory Medicine National Hospital Organization Asahikawa Medical Center Asahikawa Japan
  • Keith Wilner
    Pfizer Oncology La Jolla CA USA
  • Mizuki Yoshida
    Pfizer R&D Japan Tokyo Japan
  • Mitsuhiro Isozaki
    Pfizer R&D Japan Tokyo Japan
  • Shinsuke Wada
    Pfizer R&D Japan Tokyo Japan
  • Fumito Tsuji
    SFJ Pharma Japan Osaka Japan
  • Kazuhiko Nakagawa
    Department of Medical Oncology Kindai University Faculty of Medicine Osaka Japan

説明

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>In a subgroup of Japanese patients in the ARCHER 1050 randomized phase 3 trial, we evaluated the efficacy and safety and determined the effects of dose modifications on adverse events (AE) and therapy management of first‐line oral dacomitinib 45 mg compared with oral gefitinib 250 mg, each once daily in 28‐d cycles, in patients with <jats:italic>EGFR</jats:italic>‐activating mutation–positive (EGFR‐positive; exon 19 deletion or exon 21 L858R substitution mutations) advanced non‐small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The primary endpoint was progression‐free survival (PFS; RECIST, version 1.1, by blinded independent review). In 81 Japanese patients (40 dacomitinib, 41 gefitinib), PFS was longer with dacomitinib compared with gefitinib (hazard ratio [HR], 0.544 [95% confidence interval {CI}, 0.307‐0.961]; 2‐sided <jats:italic>P </jats:italic>= .0327; median 18.2 for dacomitinib [95% CI, 11.0‐31.3] mo, 9.3 [95% CI, 7.4‐14.7] mo for gefitinib). The most common Grade 3 AEs were dermatitis acneiform with dacomitinib (27.5%) and increased alanine aminotransferase with gefitinib (12.2%). A higher proportion of patients receiving dacomitinib (85.0%) compared with gefitinib (24.4%) had AEs leading to dose reduction. Incidence and severity of diarrhea, dermatitis acneiform, stomatitis and paronychia were generally reduced after dacomitinib dose reductions and dacomitinib treatment duration was generally longer in patients with a dose reduction in comparison with those without a dose reduction. Our results confirmed the efficacy and safety of first‐line dacomitinib in Japanese patients with EGFR‐positive advanced NSCLC.</jats:p>

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