Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Not yet recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT06436144 |
Other study ID # |
ABC2024521 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Not yet recruiting |
Phase |
Phase 2
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
June 2024 |
Est. completion date |
December 2029 |
Study information
Verified date |
May 2024 |
Source |
Daping Hospital and the Research Institute of Surgery of the Third Military Medical University |
Contact |
He Yong |
Phone |
86-23-68757791 |
Email |
heyong8998[@]126.com |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Osimertinib, though a standard first-line treatment for EGFR-mutant advanced NSCLC, shows
primary resistance in 10-30% of patients, leading to disease progression within 3-4 months.
This resistance is linked to co-mutations in genes like TP53, RB1, and PIK3CA, among others.
Studies indicate that Topo II inhibitor Etoposide (VP-16) can reduce cell survival, enhance
DNA damage, and delay resistance in Osimertinib-resistant cells, suggesting a potential
combination therapy to manage resistance.This study is a single-center, prospective,
single-arm study evaluating the efficacy and safety of osimertinib combined with etoposide as
a first-line treatment in patients with osimertinib-resistant or -insensitive advanced
non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The study focuses on patients with advanced NSCLC (stage
IIIB or IV) with EGFR-sensitive mutations who developed slow resistance to osimertinib and
for whom secondary biopsy after resistance did not identify any therapeutic targets.
Description:
Although Osimertinib has become the standard first-line treatment choice for EGFRm advanced
NSCLC, a subset of patients still do not benefit from first-line Osimertinib treatment. Some
patients even experience disease progression at the initial stages of Osimertinib treatment.
As early as 2010 and 2016, studies published in J Clin Oncol and Onco Targets Ther noted that
approximately 10-30% of patients either do not respond to initial EGFR TKI treatment or
experience disease control for less than 3 months despite carrying EGFR mutations (PMID:
19949011, 27382309). Furthermore, the FLAURA study on first-line Osimertinib treatment for
EGFRm advanced NSCLC patients found that 3% of patients did not respond to Osimertinib,
indicating potential primary resistance to Osimertinib (PMID: 29151359). This primary
resistance is characterized by disease progression or stabilization within 3-4 months of EGFR
TKI treatment, with no evidence of objective response during treatment (PMID: 27382309).
Thus, primary resistance to third-generation EGFR-TKI Osimertinib significantly limits its
clinical efficacy and presents a critical clinical challenge.
The mechanisms underlying primary resistance to Osimertinib are complex and not well
understood, and research data are limited. Current evidence suggests that primary resistance
to first-line Osimertinib in EGFRm advanced NSCLC patients may be related to concomitant
co-mutations, such as atypical EGFR mutations and downstream/bypass pathway gene
abnormalities (see Figure 1). Approximately 20-30% of EGFR mutation patients present with
co-mutations at initial diagnosis, with common co-mutated genes including TP53 (54.6-64.6%),
RB1 (9.6-10.33%), ERBB2 (8-11%), CTNNB1 (9.6%), PIK3CA (9-12.4%), and cell cycle-related
genes like CDK4/CDK6/CCNE1, MET, KEAP1/NFE2L2/CUL3 axis, etc. These gene abnormalities can
mediate primary resistance to EGFR-TKI therapy by activating EGFR bypass or downstream
signaling pathways (PMID: 38382773, 37093192). A 2023 article in Targeted Oncology noted that
TP53mutations, high AXL mRNA expression, and low BIM mRNA expression might be associated with
poor response to Osimertinib (PMID: 37017806). Additionally, a case study published in Lung
Cancer in 2023 reported that a patient with primary resistance to Osimertinib had
simultaneous EGFR L858R and EGFR S645C mutations. After one month of Osimertinib treatment,
there was no reduction in the right upper lobe nodule size, and CEA levels continued to rise.
The patient continued with Osimertinib combined with anlotinib for four months, with no
reduction in the primary tumor and persistently elevated CEA levels, indicating primary
resistance to Osimertinib (PMID: 37842288). Other studies suggest that primary EGFR 20ins and
BIM polymorphism deletion may mediate primary resistance to Osimertinib (PMID: 34669648).
EGFR TKI primarily works by competitively binding to the ATP binding site, blocking EGFR
phosphorylation and downstream signaling pathway activation, thus inducing tumor cell
apoptosis. However, the crystal structure of EGFR 20ins does not affect the ATP binding
pocket, preventing increased affinity between EGFR TKI and EGFR protein, leading to
insensitivity and resistance to EGFR TKI therapy (PMID: 34301786). In patients with BIM gene
abnormalities, compared to wild-type BIM, EGFR mutation patients with concurrent BIM deletion
had lower ORR (28% vs 52.5%, P=0.026) and shorter PFS (8.3m vs 10.5m, P=0.031) following
Osimertinib treatment (PMID: 34669648). Additionally, NSCLC patients with concurrent SCLC
components or SCLC transformation may also exhibit primary resistance to Osimertinib (PMID:
29290257).Recent research has found that the DNA topoisomerase II (Topo II) inhibitor
Etoposide (VP-16) synergistically reduces cell survival, enhances DNA damage and apoptosis
induction in Osimertinib-resistant cells, inhibits the growth of Osimertinib-resistant
tumors, and delays the emergence of acquired resistance to Osimertinib. Mechanistically,
Osimertinib promotes proteasomal degradation mediated by fbxw7, leading to DNA damage and
reduced Topo IIα levels in NSCLC cells; these effects are absent in Osimertinib-resistant
cell lines with high Topo IIα levels. Elevated Topo IIα levels have also been detected in
most EGFRm NSCLC tissues that recur after EGFR-TKI treatment. In sensitive EGFRm NSCLC cells,
forced expression of ectopic TOP2A confers resistance to Osimertinib, whereas knocking down
TOP2A in Osimertinib-resistant cell lines restores their response to Osimertinib-induced DNA
damage and apoptosis. Overall, these findings reveal the important role of Topo IIα
inhibition in mediating the therapeutic effects of Osimertinib on EGFRm NSCLC and provide a
scientific rationale for targeting Topo II with Etoposide (VP-16) to manage
Osimertinib-insensitive or primary-resistant cases (PMID: 38451729).