2 Clarke Drive
Suite 100
Cranbury, NJ 08512
© 2024 MJH Life Sciences™ and OncLive - Clinical Oncology News, Cancer Expert Insights. All rights reserved.
Molecular testing is done for patients with non–small cell lung cancer to determine what genetic abnormalities are present. If a common-enough mutation is detected—such as EGFR or ALK—then patients are able to receive a targeted agent matched to that driver.
Mohammad Jahanzeb, MD
Molecular testing is done for patients with non—small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) to determine what genetic abnormalities are present. If a common-enough mutation is detected—such as EGFR or ALK—then patients are able to receive a targeted agent matched to that driver.
However, for patients with non-driver—mutated lung adenocarcinoma, options have been limited for more than 3 decades, explains Mohammad Jahanzeb, MD.
“In other words, it’s the ‘non-fun’ stuff,” said Jahanzeb, who lectured on this patient population during the 2016 OncLive State of the Science Summit on Advanced Non—Small Cell Lung Cancer. “It does not include any new mutations, immunotherapy, anti-VEGF antibodies, or any other antibodies. Basically, this is the platinum-based doublet therapy that we have had for more than 3 decades.”
There are still multiple areas in which chemotherapy can be used in these patients, he adds, including in the first- and second-line settings and as maintenance therapy. Moreover, researchers are comparing cisplatin- versus carboplatin-based regimens, and exploring new options for maintenance treatment.
For example, an ongoing, double-blind, randomized trial is investigating the differences in efficacy and safety between erlotinib (Tarceva) and pemetrexed as maintenance therapy in patients with lung adenocarcinoma (NCT02399566).
A second study is exploring bevacizumab (Avastin) as a maintenance treatment for patients with lung adenocarcinoma who previously received 4 to 6 cycles of induction platinum-based doublet therapy plus bevacizumab (NCT02093000).
OncLive: This sounds like a difficult subtype of lung cancer to treat. What should community oncologists take away from your presentation?
What treatment changes do you see occurring in this area over the next decade?
In an interview, Jahanzeb, who is professor of Clinical Medicine, Hematology/Oncology, Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, discussed why researchers must work on identifying targetable mutations in these non-driver adenocarcinomas and shared his insight on other trends and challenges in the field.Jahanzeb: They should keep [working to] shrink the non-driver mutation adenocarcinoma population. We should test everyone, and there should be no such thing [as non-driver adenocarcinoma]. Everybody should get individualized and personalized treatment.It is very exciting—World War II is where, by accident, we saw nitrogen mustard as chemotherapy. Sixty-five years later, by 2010, we still only had less than 10 FDA-approved drugs for lung cancer. In the last 5 years, we have had more than 10 drugs approved for the disease. Today, there are 600 to 700 drugs in the pipeline.
What combination regimens are currently being studied that could be practice changing?
Aside from this population having limited treatment options, what other obstacles are there?
What we will see now is more and more targeted therapies, many lines of therapy, combinations of immunotherapy agents with targeted therapies, and combinations of checkpoint inhibitors with each other. We will be shrinking the diminishing role of cytotoxic chemotherapy, so it’s a very exciting time.I am very excited about the checkpoint inhibitor combinations, such as ipilimumab (Yervoy) and nivolumab (Opdivo). There are many examples of multiple checkpoint inhibitor clinical trials. I am also very interested in targeted therapy combination trials to inhibit multiple points in the pathway, as well as inhibit multiple pathways that can cooperate with each other. Those are very exciting explorations that are going on right now.One of the major challenges is that there are too many trials that are competing with each other. Also, there is still not enough tissue testing.
You mentioned there being too many ongoing clinical trials. How can the oncology community overcome that?
And, community radiation oncologists, medical oncologists, interventional radiologists, and pathologists need to all be sitting in 1 room—rather than be making these decisions in isolation. Universities and institutions may have tumor boards, but there needs to be a tumor board available for every practice. We are at that point now.I don’t think it will be overcome by any 1 factor. This is because everybody has their own compound and their own vested interest. They are not interested in helping someone else’s compound. Consortiums of physicians, cooperative groups—even the National Cancer Institute—can align incentives in a way so that the trials are prioritized. Then, somehow there could be centralized clearing mechanisms in which it automatically happens that the best study and the best design survives—and poor studies and poor designs do not survive.