Docetaxel (Taxotere) in the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer: An international update

Docetaxel (Taxotere) in the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer: An international update

Seminarsin Oncology Vol 28, No 1, Suppl 2 Docetaxel (Taxotere) in the Treatment Lung Cancer: An International Mark Based on the (Taxotere; cho...

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Seminarsin

Oncology

Vol 28, No 1, Suppl 2

Docetaxel

(Taxotere) in the Treatment Lung Cancer: An International Mark

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Semin Saunders

Oncol

28 (suppl

2):/-3.

Copyright

0 ZOO/

by WB.

Company.

N 1999 lung cancer became the leading cause of cancer death worldwide. Cancers of the lung are the most preventable of all neoplasms. The consequences of changing patterns of cigarette use are not long in appearing. In the United States, women who started smoking within the past 30 years now comprise half of all new lung cancer cases. This development will soon be felt in other countries. Wherever in the world we practice, our duty as physicians is to use whatever influence we have to combat cigarette smoking. This meeting chronicled our attempts to deal with the reality of lung cancer. It also marked a happier milestone: in December 1999, docetaxel (Taxotere; Aventis, Antony, France) was approved for use in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in both the United States and the European Union. This is the culmination of clinical trial programs that started in the early 1990s (leading to approval in Japan, Canada, and Australia), and of the phase III program that began 4 years ago.l-7 Overall, the role of chemotherapy in the treatment of NSCLC has grown in recent years. Cytotoxic agents are currently used alone and in combination both first and second line for locally advanced and metastatic disease. They are increasingly incorporated into multimodality strategies for the management of earlier stage disease, either presurgically, postsurgically, or, in the case of in-

I

Seminars in Oncology, Vol 28, No I, Suppl 2 (February),

200 I: pp I-3

Christian

February 2001

of Non-Small Update

Cell

Manegold

operable tumors, concurrently or sequentially with radiotherapy. One of the main reasons for the increased use and acceptability of chemotherapy has been the development of new drugs with mechanisms of action that confer higher singlesagent activity and less toxicity. Taxanes that stabilize tubulin, such as docetaxel, are among the most promising of these novel drugs. Docetaxel in particular has gained the reputation of being one of the most effective agents in the treatment of NSCLC. Its development program has been comprehensive and embraces both advanced and early disease. The reports presented at this meeting began with the encouraging phase III results recently achieved with docetaxel.6-s It is appropriate to briefly review the phase II data that laid the foundations for the randomized trials. In previously untreated patients with advanced NSCLC, single-agent docetaxel at doses of 60, 75, or 100 mg/m’, administered once every 3 weeks has achieved objective response rates of approximately 30% (range, 19% to 63% in the 12 phase II trials).’ The median survival averaged approximately 9 months (range, 6 to 11 months), with 39% of patients alive at 1 year (range, 21% to 75%). The main side effect was neutropenia of short duration.

From the Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY; and ThoraxKlinik, Heidelberg, Germany. Drs Kris and Manegold have received consulting fees, honoraria, and clinical trial support from Auentis, Inc. Address reprint requests to Mark G. K-is, MD, Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Aue, New York, NY 10021. Copyright 0 2001 by W.B. Saunders Company 0093.7754/01/X301-0201$35.00/O doi:I0.1053/sonc.2001.18387

2

DOCETAXEL

In the second-line setting, phase II trials at the 100 mg/m2 dose involved a total of 240 patients. Response rates of 8% to 21% were achieved.z-5 At a dose of 60 mg/m2 dose in 30 patients, a response rate of 21% was observed.9 From the phase II trials, median survival ranged from 5.7 to 9.4 months and l-year survival ranged from 25% to 41%.2-5s9 At the time the studies were conducted, there was no standard therapy for previously treated NSCLC patients. The phase II results achieved with docetaxel were sufficiently promising to justify two randomized phase III trials in the secondline setting. GAINS

IN SURVIVAL AND OF LIFE

QUALITY

The studies of docetaxel versus best supportive care6 and of docetaxel versus vinorelbine or ifosfamide7 in previously treated NSCLC patients are presented in detail in the report by Shepherd et al (see pp 4-9). The essential finding of these trials is that docetaxel, particularly at the dose of 75 mg/m’, produces clinical benefits and improves both survival and quality of life when compared with control treatments. At the time the current American Society of Clinical Oncology’s treatment guidelines were drawn up, there were no randomized phase III data on which to make recommendations for the second-line treatment of NSCLC. This situation has now clearly changed, and our practice should change with it. For several years, the accepted first-line therapy for advanced NSCLC has been combination chemotherapy based on cisplatin. More recently, combinations involving gemcitabine or vinorelbine have been investigated, based on nonoverlapping toxicities and preclinical evidence of additive or synergistic interaction. Data from a range of studies that have docetaxel in such combinations were presented at this meeting. Early findings suggest that the combination of docetaxel with gemcitabine may be as effective as cisplatin-based chemotherapy in prolonging survival while having the advantage of lower toxicity. The challenge ahead is not just to equal the survival gains achieved with cisplatin combinations, but to better them. MULTIMODALITY

TREATMENT

In patients with locally advanced and inoperable NSCLC, attention has focused recently on the benefits of combining chemotherapy with radio-

FOR NSCLC

therapy. It has proven feasible to combine weekly docetaxel 20 mg/m2 with radiotherapy given at a dose of 2 Gy/d for 5 days every week.10 Given this finding, an ongoing international randomized phase II study is investigating the role of concomitant chemoradiotherapy with docetaxel versus radiotherapy alone in stage III A/B patients who have completed induction chemotherapy. Initial treatment is with docetaxel 85 mg/m2 on day 1 plus cisplatin 40 mg/m’ on days 1 and 2 every 3 weeks. Patients showing a response after two cycles are randomized to either docetaxel 20 mg/m2/wk for 6 weeks plus radiotherapy 2 Gy/d for 5 days per week for 6 weeks or radiotherapy alone. It is through the multimodality treatment of such patients that cures have been achieved with chemotherapy. The availability of new approaches raises the possibility that more patients can be cured. It is therefore a high priority to test the best of our new agents in this setting. In addition, presurgical chemotherapy involving docetaxel is being extensively investigated. A Finnish phase III study is comparing docetaxel plus surgery versus surgery alone, while three phase II trials are studying docetaxel given in combination with cisplatin or cisplatin plus gemcitabine. Preliminary data from one trial involving docetaxel plus cisplatin show promising response rates of 66%, with 12% complete responders and only 4% of patients experiencing progressive disease.” The latter part of the meeting included discussions on how the range of new agents can greatly increase the flexibility of treatment. It is now possible to find a drug or drug combination and an administration schedule matching the circumstances of the individual patient, including his or her susceptibility to various forms of toxicity. Weekly docetaxel schedules are especially welltolerated. MOLECULAR MARKERS CENTER STAGE

TAKE

Exciting developments in molecular biology have given us the ability to target therapies to particular tumor types or characteristics of individual tumors.12 For example, if tubulin mutations are present, tubulin-active drugs may not be the best choice. If the ~53 gene is nonfunctional, it makes more sense to use a treatment that induces apoptosis independently of ~53 pathways. Use of molecular markers is also poised to bring

KRIS AND

MANEGOLD

3

about a substantial refinement in our ability to stage disease and so focus treatment. Nowhere is this more critical than in the postsurgical setting in which some patients harbor deadly but undetectable micrometastases that remain after maximal induction and local treatment. Conversely, treatment could be withheld from those with no evidence of tumor cells in the marrow or circulating tumor DNA in peripheral blood. Such markers also promise to be an invaluable tool in measuring the burden of residual disease during therapy as a means to evaluate the effectiveness of interventions targeting micrometastases. The closing years of the 20th century were times of significant advances in the treatment of NSCLC. The new century holds great promise of further progress. Docetaxel has enriched the possibilities of effective therapy in the recent past and will continue to do so.

1. Rigas

JR:

Do newer

chemotherapeutic

agents

docetaxel

for advanced

or metastatic

platinum

refractory

improve

non-

12:335,

1993

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patients previously treated Em J Cancer 35:247, 1999

R, Kerr

RN,

et al: Randomized

phase

III study of Taxotere (T) (100 mg/m’ and 75 mg/m’) versus vinorelbine (V) or ifosfamide (I) in non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)

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Book.

Baltimore,

MD,

Lippin-