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Genetic profiling and epidermal growth factor receptor-directed therapy in nonsmall cell lung cancer

J. Cadranel, G. Zalcman, L. Sequist
European Respiratory Journal 2011 37: 183-193; DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00179409
J. Cadranel
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  • For correspondence: jacques.cadranel@tnn.aphp.fr
G. Zalcman
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L. Sequist
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Abstract

The principle of preferentially selecting patients most likely to benefit from therapy according to their genetic profile has led to substantial clinical benefit in some tumour types, and has potential to considerably refine treatment in advanced nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Effective, reliable use of molecular biomarkers to inform clinical practice requires the standardisation of testing methods and careful assessment of biomarkers’ predictive and prognostic value.

Although a number of studies have shown that patients with activating mutations in exons 18–21 of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) gene respond particularly well to gefitinib and erlotinib, a prospective, randomised study was needed to differentiate between the prognostic and predictive value of EGFR mutations. From one such study, it appeared that mutational testing should become standard at diagnosis, at least for adenocarcinoma patients with a never or low smoking history, as clinical predictors are insufficient to optimise treatment.

However, outstanding questions remain: what are the treatment options for patients with tumours resistant to erlotinib/gefitinib? What conclusions about treatment can we draw from EGFR copy number or KRAS mutation status? What role should anti-EGFR antibodies play in NSCLC treatment, and in which patients?

This review considers current evidence linking biomarker profile to efficacy of EGFR-targeted therapy in NSCLC, and clinical implications of recent findings.

  • Biomarker
  • epidermal growth factor receptor
  • epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitors
  • genetic profiling
  • mutational testing
  • nonsmall cell lung cancer

ESTABLISHING THE PRINCIPLE OF MUTATION TESTING: LESSONS FROM OTHER TUMOUR TYPES

Therapies tailored to specific genetic lesions and diagnostic tests that assay for their respective molecular targets are now an established part of clinical practice across various tumour types, including chronic myeloid leukaemia 1, gastrointestinal stromal tumours and epithelial tumours, such as breast and colon cancer 2.

Clinically relevant improvements in survival have been attained by administering targeted therapy to the appropriate patient population: for example, the addition of trastuzumab to standard first-line chemotherapy in patients with human epidermal growth factor receptor-positive (HER2+) metastatic breast cancer 3. A HER2 amplification diagnostic test is now required in breast cancer before patients are treated with trastuzumab 2. Clinical practice in colon cancer also reflects the need for mutational testing to identify patients most likely to benefit from cetuximab: patients whose tumours lack a KRAS mutation (also called wild-type) show significantly increased overall survival (OS) (median 9.5 versus 4.8 months) with cetuximab, whereas those with KRAS mutations do not benefit from therapy 4.

These successful examples validate the concept of understanding the genetic profile of patients most likely to benefit from a targeted agent and preferentially selecting those patients for therapy. However, the use of molecular biomarkers to optimise clinical outcomes requires careful assessment of their role in terms of both prognosis and treatment decision-making. Specifically, it is becoming increasingly important to accurately distinguish biomarkers as “prognostic” or “predictive”, or define them as both. Prognostic biomarkers can be thought of as a measure of the natural history of a disease that is independent of therapeutic intervention (or lack of it) 5. A population-based register or a placebo/control group from a randomised clinical study is appropriate for evaluating the prognostic value of a biomarker 5. In contrast, a predictive biomarker differentiates a group with a particular response or lack of response to a therapeutic intervention. In order to establish which patients will benefit most from a treatment, and by how much, the predictive value of a biomarker must be separated from its prognostic value. To do this, experimental and control arms can be stratified by biomarker status and an interaction test performed. It is recommended, in most cases, that biomarkers should be evaluated prospectively rather than retrospectively.

This review considers the current evidence linking biomarker profile to efficacy of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-targeted therapy in advanced nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and the clinical implications of recent findings.

EGFR TYROSINE KINASE INHIBITOR: THE FIRST TARGETED THERAPY IN NSCLC

In NSCLC, activation of the EGFR/HER1 pathway results in a signalling cascade that promotes tumour growth and progression 6. EGFR is expressed in a large proportion of NSCLC tumours 7, and its associated signalling pathways are frequently dysregulated. These observations provided the rationale for developing small-molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) targeting EGFR, erlotinib and gefitinib, and EGFR-targeted antibodies, such as cetuximab.

Gefitinib is currently the most widely used EGFR TKI worldwide. It has single-agent activity in patients previously treated with chemotherapy 8, 9, but did not prolong survival compared with placebo in the Iressa Survival Evaluation in Lung Cancer (ISEL) randomised, phase III trial in the second- and third-line setting 10. When compared with single-agent chemotherapy, it has been shown to be non-inferior to docetaxel, with improved quality of life in a large phase III study of previously treated patients 11; in a smaller, randomised phase II study of chemotherapy-naïve elderly patients, gefitinib improved quality of life, without progression-free survival (PFS) or OS decrement, compared with vinorelbine 12. First-line addition of gefitinib to cisplatin and gemcitabine (Iressa NSCLC Trial Assessing Combination Treatment (INTACT)-1) 13 or carboplatin and paclitaxel (INTACT-2) 14 showed no significant difference in response rate (RR) or survival compared with chemotherapy alone.

Erlotinib is the most widely used EGFR TKI in the USA and European Union, and has shown single-agent antitumour activity and symptom improvement in previously treated NSCLC patients 15. In contrast to gefitinib, second- and third-line erlotinib significantly improved OS compared with placebo in the BR.21 Phase III trial (6.7 versus 4.7 months; hazard ratio (HR) 0.70; p<0.001) 16. Like the combination trials with gefitinib, phase III trials combining erlotinib with first-line chemotherapy (Tarceva Lung Cancer Investigation and Tarceva Responses in Conjunction with Taxol and Carboplatin (TRIBUTE)) showed no significant difference in survival between erlotinib and control arms 17, 18. Finally, the phase III Sequential Tarceva in Unresectable NSCLC (SATURN) trial assessed the efficacy of maintenance erlotinib compared with placebo in patients with advanced NSCLC who did not show disease progression after first-line, platinum-based doublet chemotherapy. This trial demonstrated a significant improvement in PFS for the 437 patients receiving erlotinib, compared with the 447 patients receiving placebo (PFS at 24 weeks 31 versus 17%; HR 0.71, 95% CI 0.62–0.82; log-rank p<0.0001) 19.

To summarise, both gefitinib and erlotinib are considered to be active single-agent therapies in NSCLC patients treated previously with chemotherapy. Reasons for the discrepancy between the BR.21 and ISEL trial outcomes, when both drugs are chemically and preclinically similar, may be due to dosing: erlotinib is dosed at 150 mg·day−1, its maximum tolerated dose (MTD), whereas gefitinib is dosed at 250 mg·day−1, about one-third to one-half of its MTD 20. Other contributing factors could be differences in the populations studied in the two trials, including divergent representation of patients most likely to respond, and differences in the definition of second-line patients, either as those with progressive or those with stable disease after first-line treatment.

EGFR MUTATIONS IN NSCLC: IMPLICATIONS FOR FIRST-LINE TREATMENT WITH EGFR TKIS

A subset of patients responds particularly well to EGFR TKIs. Even in early studies, it was apparent that gefitinib and erlotinib were associated with greater responses in patients with adenocarcinoma, never-smokers, patients from East Asia and females 21. Somatic activating mutations of the EGFR gene have now been identified; these mutations confer an increased susceptibility to EGFR TKI-mediated cell death and probably underlie the increased responses observed in these clinically defined groups 22–24. Two EGFR mutations, the exon 19 deletion and the exon 21 L858R substitution, account for ∼90% of all known EGFR kinase domain mutations 25.

A substantial body of evidence verifies the importance of EGFR mutational status in determining which patients are most likely to respond to treatment with erlotinib/gefitinib. Both retrospective studies of second- and third-line EGFR TKIs in unselected populations, as well as prospective studies of first-line EGFR TKI treatment in enriched populations, have been published (table 1). Over a number of studies, the weighted average RR to EGFR TKI treatment in mutation-positive cases was 78%, with most series reporting a RR of more than 60%. In mutation-negative cases, in contrast, the average RR was 10% 38. This is evidence that EGFR mutations are associated with response to EGFR TKI therapy.

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Table 1– Studies evaluating the predictive value of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutations and responses to erlotinib/gefitinib

The studies mentioned above include an evaluation of the impact of EGFR mutations on survival after gefitinib approval, compared with historical controls (EGFR mutants diagnosed and treated before gefitinib approval). A significant association between EGFR mutations and prolonged survival was shown with gefitinib 39. Taken together, these studies suggest that EGFR mutational status may be a predictive biomarker. Furthermore, patients with the exon 19 deletion mutation have significantly prolonged time to progression and increased survival rate compared with those with the exon 21 L858R point mutation 40, 41. In addition to evidence that EGFR mutational status may have predictive value, retrospective data from randomised, controlled trials, including INTACT and TRIBUTE study results, suggest that EGFR mutational status also has prognostic value, with patients harbouring EGFR mutations demonstrating prolonged survival compared with those who do not, regardless of treatment group assignment 42, 43.

Prospective studies have assessed the efficacy of first-line EGFR TKIs in patients harbouring EGFR mutations. One example is the iTARGET trial, in which patients with advanced NSCLC harbouring EGFR mutations (including, but not restricted to, the L858R and exon 19 deletion mutations) received first-line gefitinib 30. Of 98 patients screened, 34 had EGFR mutations and 31 received gefitinib. RR, the primary end-point, was 55%; median PFS was 9.2 months (95% CI 6.2–11.8 months) 30. This study used clinical characteristics to enrich the patient population for those likely to be EGFR mutation-positive, demonstrating that genotype-directed therapy with EGFR TKIs is feasible in a US population, where the overall frequency of EGFR mutations is relatively low, compared with Asian populations.

Another prospective study of advanced NSCLC was carried out by the Spanish Lung Cancer Group, in which patients with EGFR mutations were selected to receive first-line treatment with erlotinib. Lung tumours from 2,105 patients were screened; EGFR mutations were found in 350 (16.6%) of these and 217 received erlotinib, among them, 113 patients received erlotinib as first-line treatment. In these patients, median PFS was 14.0 months (95% CI 11.3–16.7 months) and median OS was 27 months. This study cohort demonstrated that large-scale screening of patients for EGFR mutations and customised treatment with EGFR TKIs are feasible 32.

Taken together, the studies described above demonstrate that EGFR TKIs are highly effective in selected patients, with treatment producing improved response rates and PFS compared with chemotherapy. Results from these studies also support the concept that, in a particular patient subgroup, first-line treatment with EGFR TKIs may be the most effective option. A prospective, randomised study to differentiate between the prognostic and predictive value of EGFR mutations, and to determine the optimal treatment strategy for different subgroups of NSCLC patients was needed. More recently, the first such study was completed and published.

The results from the Iressa Pan-Asia Study (IPASS) of first-line gefitinib versus carboplatin/paclitaxel in 1,217 clinically selected patients with advanced NSCLC 29 have considerable implications for clinical practice. Eligible patients were never- or light ex-smokers with adenocarcinoma histology; the overall rate of EGFR mutations in the 437 evaluable patients with available tissue was 59.7%. Gefitinib had a superior PFS compared to chemotherapy, exceeding the primary end-point of the trial, which was to show noninferiority. The molecular subgroup analysis demonstrated that patients with EGFR mutations had superior PFS in the gefitinib arm compared with those in the chemotherapy arm (HR 0.48, 95% CI 0.36–0.64; p<0.001; treatment by EGFR mutations status interaction test, p<0.0001) 29. A crucial observation from this study is taken from the patients whose tumours had wild-type EGFR. In those patients, all of whom had clinical characteristics typical of gefitinib responders, those receiving gefitinib had a marked decline in PFS compared with those who received chemotherapy (HR 2.85, 95% CI 2.05–3.98; p<0.001) 29. This argues strongly that mutational testing should become standard practice at diagnosis, at least for adenocarcinoma patients with a never- or low smoking history, as clinical predictors are insufficient to optimise treatment. Such patients should be treated with first-line EGFR TKI therapy if their tumours harbour activating EGFR mutations, given the demonstrated PFS benefit, and chemotherapy should be the preferred therapy for those patients with wild-type EGFR. OS analysis on the IPASS trial is not yet completed. However, other studies support its conclusions; for example, in a smaller phase III study comparing first-line gefitinib with carboplatin/paclitaxel in patients known to have EGFR mutation-positive advanced NSCLC, PFS was significantly prolonged in the gefitinib group in an interim analysis (10.4 versus 5.5 months; HR 0.4; log rank p<0.001) 44. This was also confirmed by another, more recently published phase III trial comparing first-line gefitinib with cisplatin plus docetaxel in NSCLC patients harbouring EGFR mutations. The gefitinib group had significantly prolonged median PFS compared with the patients receiving cisplatin plus docetaxel (9.2 versus 6.3 months; HR 0.489; log rank p<0.0001) 36.

It is important to note that IPASS was an Asian study, and that activating EGFR mutations occur at a lower frequency in Caucasian populations (∼40 and ∼10%, respectively). Some feel that this may play a role in determining the uptake of mutational testing before first-line therapy, although it could be argued that it is more important to perform the definitive test in a population with a lesser chance of mutation. In addition to its implications for therapy choice, IPASS also set a new standard for the collection and analysis of biomarker data within large-scale clinical studies; this has an important bearing on tissue collection and analysis in future studies. Further prospective clinical trials are needed to confirm these findings in a study population that is not entirely Asian, validate that the same trend is seen with other chemotherapeutics (e.g. pemetrexed), and to examine whether the sequence of chemotherapy and EGFR TKI therapy in patients with mutations influences survival and other outcomes. For example, in a recently published retrospective study including 152 NSCLC patients with exon 19 deletions or L858R, those receiving first-line gefitinib had a significantly higher RR than chemotherapy-treated patients (76 versus 54%; p = 0.005). However, OS and PFS did not differ significantly between chemotherapy-naïve and -pretreated groups (p = 0.207 and p = 0.804, respectively) 45. It is also important to note that patients with EGFR mutations also have a higher RR to chemotherapy compared to patients with wild-type EGFR. This was demonstrated by a phase III, open-label study investigating the efficacy of gefitinib compared with carboplatin plus paclitaxel in patients with NSCLC. During that study, EGFR mutation-positive patients were shown to have a higher objective RR to carboplatin/paclitaxel chemotherapy than patients with wild-type EGFR (47.3 versus 23.5%) 29. Physicians need to consider this information alongside data from mutational testing and the overall state of health of the patient when deciding on first- and second-line therapy until more conclusive evidence is available; in the long term, data on patient selection may also have an impact on social security reimbursement in European countries. In addition to these considerations, the time to initiation of therapy with EGFR TKIs requires clarification in cases of aggressive disease in which it may not be appropriate to wait for the results of EGFR mutation testing. Furthermore, as it is likely that most patients will, at some point, receive treatment with an EGFR TKI, the risk of patients with EGFR mutations experiencing side-effects from first-line chemotherapy that preclude further treatment, or of new metastases occurring at progression, should always be considered when selecting a first-line treatment.

RESISTANCE TO EGFR TKIS: NEED FOR A NEW GENERATION OF TARGETED THERAPY

Although patients with EGFR mutations initially tend to have a good therapeutic response to erlotinib or gefitinib, prolonged administration of either drug invariably leads to secondary resistance, with patients experiencing relapse or tumour progression 25.

To date, two principal mechanisms have been identified that underlie secondary resistance (fig. 1). One is a resistance mutation in the EGFR gene, T790M 47, 48, which impairs the binding of the reversible TKIs erlotinib or gefitinib to the adenosine triphosphate binding pocket of the EGFR tyrosine kinase, rendering them ineffective 49. T790M occurs in ∼50% of patients with acquired resistance to gefitinib/erlotinib 47, 50. Some studies have suggested that, rather than causing the mutation to arise, treatment with TKIs simply selects for the resistant clones. Molecular characterisation of tumour tissue from 27 patients with metastatic NSCLC using an ultrasensitive, allele-specific assay revealed that low levels of T790M EGFR were present in 38% of patients. The presence of the T790M mutation was associated with a significantly shorter PFS with EGFR TKI therapy compared with patients who did not have detectable levels of T790M at baseline, although it did not preclude response 51. Although other mutations in exons 19–21 have been identified that also confer resistance to EGFR TKIs 52, T790M is the most common.

Figure 1–
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Figure 1–

a) The T790M mutation prevents erlotinib/gefitinib from effectively inhibiting phosphorylation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). b) MET amplification activates phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signalling via ErbB3, independently of EGFR. Reproduced from 46 with permission from the publisher.

Irreversible TKIs that bind covalently with the catalytic pocket of EGFR are believed to provide a sustained blockade of EGFR signalling and may also retain activity against tumours that harbour resistance mutations, such as EGFR T790M. Several such agents are under clinical development for the treatment of various tumour types, including EKB-569 53, CI-1033 54, PF-00299804 55 and BIBW 2992 56 (table 2). In NSCLC, it is crucial to perform studies of these drugs in patients with EGFR mutations, both in those naïve to therapy with first-generation TKIs, such as gefitinib and erlotinib, and in those who have progressed through prior TKI therapy. Preliminary phase II results from 67 patients with EGFR mutations receiving BIBW 2992 as a second-line treatment show that 66% achieved a partial response, with 51% of patients remaining progression-free at 12 months 57. If irreversible EGFR TKIs prove to be as effective as or superior to gefitinib and erlotinib, then defining their role in treating or preventing acquired resistance is of great interest.

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Table 2– Irreversible epidermal growth factor receptors (EGFR) inhibitors and MET inhibitors in clinical development in nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC)

The second major mechanism of acquired resistance is MET amplification, observed in ∼20% of patients with NSCLC who develop resistance to EGFR TKIs 58. MET amplification activates phosphoinosite 3-kinase signalling via ErbB3, independently of EGFR. This allows signalling downstream of EGFR to continue, despite the presence of EGFR inhibitors 59. MET amplification occurs independently of the T790M mutation, although both can occur simultaneously in the same patient 58, 60. A number of therapeutic strategies for the inhibition of MET or its ligand, hepatocyte growth factor, are currently under investigation in early-phase clinical trials (table 2) 61.

In general, combination treatment with EGFR TKIs and other agents targeting downstream or redundant pathways may have considerable clinical potential; combination treatment with the mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) inhibitor rapamycin and irreversible EGFR TKIs has shown activity in preclinical in vivo experiments in EGFR L858R/T790M mouse models 62.

With increasing knowledge about the molecular mechanisms of acquired resistance to EGFR TKIs, the clinical implications should be considered: will repeat mutational testing be required during the course of a patient's treatment? If so, are repeat biopsies needed or can sensitive methods be devised that allow mutations to be tested for in blood samples? Which samples are most informative, those from the primary tumour or those from metastases? In which order should treatments be administered to optimise response? Which agents are effective once the first-generation EGFR TKIs erlotinib and gefitinib are no longer effective?

EGFR COPY NUMBER IN NSCLC: A MORE OPEN QUESTION THAN EGFR MUTATION

In addition to EGFR mutations, other techniques for identifying patients who may benefit from treatment with EGFR TKIs have been studied. The most notable of these is EGFR fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH), which indicates whether there is an overall increase in EGFR gene copy number 63. FISH results have been shown to correlate with increased sensitivity to gefitinib or erlotinib and increased survival 63–65.

Results from both the BR.21 and ISEL trials suggested that patients with increased gene copy number according to FISH had improved survival with EGFR TKI therapy, compared with placebo (BR.21 HR 0.43, 95% CI 0.23–0.78 (p = 0.004); ISEL HR 0.61, 95% CI 0.36–1.04 (p = 0.067)) 66, 67. However, biomarker analyses of the SATURN study indicate that increased EGFR copy number according to FISH does not have adequate predictive power to enable selection of patients for early second-line treatment with erlotinib over placebo 68. Furthermore, in randomised trials comparing an EGFR TKI to chemotherapy, EGFR gene copy number by FISH has not always been associated with improved results on the TKI arm (table 3). Finally, in the Iressa NSCLC Trial Evaluating Response and Survival Versus Taxotere (INTEREST) study, no significant difference in OS between treatment arms was detected for any of the biomarkers assessed, including EGFR FISH, and EGFR mutation was more powerful than EGFR FISH analysis in predicting objective response and PFS in patients receiving gefitinib 70.

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Table 3– Impact of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) gene copy number and EGFR mutations in nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated by EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors

To date, one prospective clinical trial has selected patients for gefitinib therapy based on EGFR copy number according to FISH. Results from the phase II ONCOBELL study show that of 37 patients with sufficient tumour tissue for analysis, 25 (69.4%) were EGFR FISH-positive. Patients who had EGFR FISH-positive status had a significantly higher RR than EGFR FISH-negative patients (68.0 versus 9.1%; p<0.001). EGFR FISH-positive patients also had a significantly longer time to progression than EGFR FISH-negative patients (7.6 versus 2.7 months, respectively; p = 0.02). These data suggest that EGFR FISH analysis may, indeed, predict response to gefitinib 71.

In conclusion, EGFR gene amplification together with EGFR mutation is a common finding and usually affects the mutant allele 72. It is probable that the predictive value of EGFR FISH for EGFR TKI effectiveness is more likely a result of its association with EGFR mutations. In some cases, EGFR protein overexpression may result from EGFR amplification alone, but its impact on response to EGFR TKIs remains debatable.

KRAS MUTATIONS IN NSCLC: DO THEY HAVE PREDICTIVE OR PROGNOSTIC VALUE?

Somatic mutations in the oncogene KRAS have been associated with lack of primary response to EGFR TKIs in several studies. It is thought that mutations in codons 2, 12, 13 and 61 lead to constitutive activation of the RAS protein, which may allow tumour cells to grow independently of EGFR signalling and, thus, render them resistant to EGFR TKIs 73. Mutations in KRAS occur in ∼25% of European patients with adenocarcinoma, although they are less common in Asian patients 74. Increased frequency of KRAS mutations have been shown not to be significantly associated with age, sex or smoking history 73. Therefore, seeing clinical characteristics only to identify those patients who have a very limited chance of responding to treatment with EGFR TKIs is not the best option, and molecular testing will be required.

Analysis of 206 tumours from the BR.21 study showed that 15% had mutations in codons 12 or 13 of KRAS. These patients did not appear to derive any benefit from erlotinib therapy, whereas patients with wild-type KRAS did appear to gain a survival benefit (HR 0.69; p = 0.03) 67. In the TRIBUTE study, 55 out of 264 (21%) patients had KRAS mutations, and those with KRAS mutations in the erlotinib arm exhibited significantly shorter OS than those in the chemotherapy-only arm (HR 2.1, 95% CI 1.1–3.8; p = 0.019) 43. Preliminary results from 246 patients with sequenced tumour specimens receiving erlotinib in the prospective Evaluation of the EGFR Mutation Status for the Administration of EGFR-TKIs in Non Small Cell Lung Carcinoma (ERMETIC) cohort show that KRAS mutations have no significant impact on PFS but negatively affect survival, whereas EGFR mutations strongly predict prolonged PFS compared with wild-type EGFR, including all clinical and molecular markers 75.

As EGFR and KRAS mutations appear to be mutually exclusive 76–78, the possibility of defining these two biomarkers as predictors of response and resistance to EGFR TKIs, respectively, is generally accepted by many physicians, although simultaneously occurring mutations in EGFR and KRAS have been observed very rarely in tumours 43.

ANTIBODIES TO EGFR IN NSCLC: WAITING FOR A PREDICTIVE BIOMARKER?

Cetuximab, a humanised monoclonal antibody that prevents ligand binding to the extracellular domain of EGFR, has shown encouraging results in NSCLC in combination with standard chemotherapy, in both the first- and second-line settings 79–83. In the First-Line ErbituX in Lung Cancer (FLEX) study, a randomised, phase III study of cetuximab combined with cisplatin/vinorelbine (CV) versus CV alone in the first-line treatment of patients with EGFR immunohistochemistry (IHC)-positive advanced NSCLC, patients receiving cetuximab had statistically longer OS (primary end-point) than those receiving CV alone (11.3 versus 10.1 months; HR 0.871; p = 0.044). There was no significant difference in PFS between treatment groups 82. The role of EGFR copy number, KRAS mutation status and EGFR IHC values in the FLEX study have recently been reported 84. A benefit from cetuximab treatment was seen regardless of either EGFR copy number, as assessed by FISH, or KRAS mutation status 84. Currently, only a clinical characteristic is associated with increased PFS with cetuximab in FLEX: the early occurrence of skin rash. However, it is not thought that EGFR mutations play a crucial role in cetuximab activity as they do in EGFR TKI treatment, and cross-resistance with EGFR TKIs is unlikely to occur.

MUTATION TESTING: THE NEED FOR STANDARDISATION

Standardisation of sampling and test methodologies is essential to remove bias, allow comparison across trials and further our understanding of which patients may benefit from specific treatments. However, such efforts are hampered by a lack of consensus between centres on optimal methods and practical limitations, including tissue availability. Going forward, it is crucial to identify, standardise and validate methods of sampling and testing that are practicable across a wide number of hospital laboratories, and create evidence-based practice guidelines to facilitate comparison of test results between studies. The mutation status of EGFR is generally determined from samples taken by surgical resection, biopsy or fine-needle aspiration before treatment begins 27, 85–88. Although minimally invasive fine-needle aspiration procedures have safety advantages for the patient, larger tissue samples, such as those provided by core biopsies, may allow more informative and reliable mutation testing. A further consideration is tumour heterogeneity: it remains unclear whether isolated biopsy samples are truly representative of the overall tumour and whether samples taken from a primary tumour may have a different profile than metastatic sites.

If a high fraction of neoplastic cells are present in a biopsy sample, direct sequencing to determine EGFR mutation status has been regarded as the gold standard 89. Limitations in the feasibility of genomic DNA sequencing arise when tumour material available for PCR or RT-PCR is limited. In addition, direct sequencing techniques are relatively costly and time-consuming.

The fixative used in pathologic preservation and the age of the samples can also affect the quality of sequencing test results. Formalin fixation can cause nucleic acid degradation, decreased amplicon length and PCR artefacts 90. For example, in the molecular analysis of samples from the BR.21 trial of second- and third-line erlotinib, a large proportion of EGFR mutations were misidentified as uncommon novel transitions, an error caused by post mortem deamination of cytosine or adenine. These small aberrations can be artefactually amplified from low concentrations of tumour DNA and interpreted as significant when a small or old sample is analysed, whereas such deaminated sites are diluted and not detected when larger amounts of tumoural DNA are used 89, 91.

Biopsy samples with a large proportion of non-neoplastic cells are more suited to allele-specific assays, although these can only be used to assess the presence of a small number of predefined mutations. PCR-based assays are often the preferred choice here, due to their sensitivity, specificity, robustness and relative cost-effectiveness compared with direct sequencing. Because PCR-based assays look for predefined variants, they avoid the time-consuming steps of tissue microdissection and multiple rounds of DNA extraction, enabling their routine use in the clinical setting at acceptable cost. However, allele-specific PCR-based tests can only amplify known mutations in the selected EGFR regions. There are a plethora of different methods that have been published to identify EGFR mutations 35, 51, 92, 93.

Novel techniques are being developed to improve the feasibility of EGFR mutation testing from nontissue-based samples. Noninvasive testing of EGFR mutation status using serum samples and captured circulating tumour cells are under investigation 51, 94. For example, the SMart Amplification Process (SMAP) is a single nucleotide polymorphism-based diagnostic assay that can be used to detect EGFR alterations from blood samples. Hoshi et al. 95 adapted the SMAP technology to target three known hotspots for activating EGFR mutations, identifying the mutations with a high sensitivity within 30 min directly from blood samples. In addition, mutation-specific antibodies, which detect deletions in exon 19 and the L858R mutation in exon 21, have been developed and have shown high sensitivity and specificity when tested in paraffin-embedded tumour samples from NSCLC patients 96. To simplify EGFR mutation testing and ease patient selection, one option is inclusion of a standardised, registered companion diagnostic test.

It remains a challenge to ensure that testing methods are used consistently and to encourage the realisation of biomarker-directed treatment in NSCLC. Efforts are ongoing: for example, the French National Cancer Institute has implemented a 2-yr, multicentre, prospective study (ERMETIC). The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the ability of each of the participating 16 centres to perform biomarker assays, including EGFR exons 18–21 and KRAS exon 2 sequencing in paraffin-embedded tissues, as determined by the concordance of results between centres with those of an external molecular reference laboratory. After a pilot phase, during which all centres became familiar with the sequencing techniques involved, a prospective analysis has been undertaken of tumour samples from 522 EGFR TKI-naïve patients with stage IV NSCLC who received erlotinib at these centres. The objective of this part of the study was to assess the effectiveness of EGFR sequencing in identifying patients who are likely to benefit from treatment with erlotinib 75.

CONCLUSIONS

Having established the current state of evidence regarding genetic profiling and targeted therapy in NSCLC, what clinical implications can we draw? For now, EGFR TKIs should not be given as first-line treatment in the absence of an EGFR mutation test. However, we can now realistically envisage EGFR mutational testing becoming standard practice in NSCLC diagnostics, especially in patients with appropriate clinical predictors, such as never- but also former smoking patients. As this practice becomes increasingly common, important considerations include the timing of testing and standardisation of the methodology used; future efforts should be directed at developing a more practical test for EGFR mutations. For patients with EGFR mutations, the issue of secondary resistance must be addressed, and the sequence of chemotherapy in treatment paradigms that include EGFR TKIs must be more clearly defined. For patients with KRAS mutations, alternative targeted therapies may be more appropriate than EGFR TKIs and should be investigated further. For patients with neither EGFR nor KRAS mutations, representing the largest proportion of NSCLC patients, further studies to establish the best treatment options are still needed. However, it is likely that, because of what we have learned about EGFR mutations and EGFR TKIs over the past decade, development of future targeted therapies will include earlier investigation into the genotype of good responders and efforts will be focused on defining particular populations that benefit the most from treatment.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to acknowledge the editorial assistance of Ogilvy Healthworld Medical Education.

Footnotes

  • Support Statement

    Boehringer Ingelheim provided financial support for the assistance of Ogilvy Healthworld Medical Education.

  • Statement of Interest

    Statements of interest for all authors can be found at www.erj.ersjournals.com/site/misc/statements.xhtml

  • Received November 11, 2009.
  • Accepted May 6, 2010.
  • ©ERS 2011

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European Respiratory Journal: 37 (1)
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Genetic profiling and epidermal growth factor receptor-directed therapy in nonsmall cell lung cancer
J. Cadranel, G. Zalcman, L. Sequist
European Respiratory Journal Jan 2011, 37 (1) 183-193; DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00179409

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Genetic profiling and epidermal growth factor receptor-directed therapy in nonsmall cell lung cancer
J. Cadranel, G. Zalcman, L. Sequist
European Respiratory Journal Jan 2011, 37 (1) 183-193; DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00179409
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  • Article
    • Abstract
    • ESTABLISHING THE PRINCIPLE OF MUTATION TESTING: LESSONS FROM OTHER TUMOUR TYPES
    • EGFR TYROSINE KINASE INHIBITOR: THE FIRST TARGETED THERAPY IN NSCLC
    • EGFR MUTATIONS IN NSCLC: IMPLICATIONS FOR FIRST-LINE TREATMENT WITH EGFR TKIS
    • RESISTANCE TO EGFR TKIS: NEED FOR A NEW GENERATION OF TARGETED THERAPY
    • EGFR COPY NUMBER IN NSCLC: A MORE OPEN QUESTION THAN EGFR MUTATION
    • KRAS MUTATIONS IN NSCLC: DO THEY HAVE PREDICTIVE OR PROGNOSTIC VALUE?
    • ANTIBODIES TO EGFR IN NSCLC: WAITING FOR A PREDICTIVE BIOMARKER?
    • MUTATION TESTING: THE NEED FOR STANDARDISATION
    • CONCLUSIONS
    • Acknowledgments
    • Footnotes
    • REFERENCES
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  • Genetics
  • Lung cancer
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More in this TOC Section

  • Identifying and appraising outcome measures for severe asthma: a systematic review
  • Progressive pulmonary fibrosis: an expert group consensus statement
  • Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator in COPD: A role in respiratory epithelium and beyond
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