The Iressa/Tarceva Saga, Part II
Iressa was approved by the US FDA in May of 2003 as a third-line therapy, and for the next 18 months it was the only EGFR inhibitor on the market.
Iressa was approved by the US FDA in May of 2003 as a third-line therapy, and for the next 18 months it was the only EGFR inhibitor on the market.
I haven’t really covered the history or issues of directly comparing the two oral inhibitors of the epidermal growth factor receptor, or EGFR, which are Iressa (gefitinib) and Tarceva (erlotinib). This is really because over the last few years, gefitinib has had disappointing results in some important trials and is no longer readily used or available, while the remarkably similar drug Tarceva has been approved by the US FDA and is a standard treatment for patients with advanced NSCLC that has previously been treated with chemotherapy.
Although EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors and chemotherapy agents have been tested in previously treated patients with advanced NSCLC, and tarceva, alimta, and taxotere are all approved by the US FDA in this setting, we haven't had studies directly comparing chemo to targeted therapy. However, we're starting to get the first glimpses of information, including a randomized Phase III trial out of Japan that gave previously treated advanced NSCLC patients either iressa or taxotere.
In contrast to the guidelines that exist for treating advanced lung cancer in the first-line setting for 4-6 cycles, there are really just practice patterns and good judgment to guide decisions of how long to treat in the second-line therapy. First, this is a relatively new question. As I previously mentioned when describing the history of treatment for advanced lung cancer, ten years ago there was plenty of debate about whether the benefits of treating NSCLC were sufficient to make this a standard of care.
As introduced in the last post, ZD6474, or Zactima, is a pill that blocks tumor blood supply and at higher doses (in the 300 mg per day range) also blocks EGFR. This mutli-targeted therapy has shown some intriguing activity when combined with chemo, and today I'll focus on the research that gave it as a single agent and where it has led us in terms of current trials.
In prior posts I've described the idea of combining targeted agents like Tarceva and Avastin, but there are also some single agents that inhibit multiple targets within cancer cells. I've described sorafenib/nexavar in a prior post. Today I'll focus on another multi-targeted agent, known previously as ZD6474, and with a marketing name of Zactima. Similar to the combination of avastin and tarceva, this single oral drug is anti-angiogenic and also blocks EGFR. Although less well studied, it also blocks a protein called RET and can inhibit cell proliferation that way.
Yesterday I reviewed a series of studies of the EGFR monoclonal antibody cetixumab, or Erbitux, combined with chemotherapy. Overall, these trials are modestly encouraging, without what I would consider to be a potential antagonistic effect when chemo and EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) like Iressa or Tarceva. However, we still don't have studies big enough to establish any role for erbitux. Today, I'll cover the very limited experience of single-agent Erbitux in advanced NSCLC.
Most of the discussion with about inhibiting the EGFR axis in lung cancer has focused on the orally available tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) that work inside the cells. However, another way to inhibit the cells is by giving an IV "monoclonal antibody" which is a protein that attaches to the outside of the cell at the EGFR target and can block activity. A figure of the two approaches is shown here, with the antibody circled in red:
Both standard chemotherapy and EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have been approved in NSCLC, and other anti-EGFR agents like erbitux/cetuximab and vectabix/panitumumab are also commercially available for treating other cancers and are being studied in lung cancer. Iressa was previously approved as a single agent in previously treated patients with advanced NSCLC, and Tarceva is now available but approved also as a single agent therapy. However, some oncologists give EGFR inhibitor therapies in combination with standard chemo.
In my last post, I described the somewhat disappointing results for tarceva compared with chemotherapy in a trial of unselected advanced NSCLC patients with a marginal performance status. However, EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors like iressa and tarceva were developed as targeted therapies, so perhaps they might prove to be more effective if used selectively, in a targeted population.
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