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Decade in review: a new era for RET-rearranged lung cancers

Noura J. Choudhury, Alexander Drilon

2020Translational Lung Cancer Research41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

fusions drive the oncogenesis of 1-2% of NSCLCs and represent a substantial global burden of disease. Although these fusions were first identified more than thirty years ago, targeted therapy for RET fusion-positive lung cancers was only explored in the last decade. Whereas repurposed multikinase inhibitors were initially tested, selective inhibitors RET inhibitors have dramatically improved outcomes for patients whose tumors harbor these alterations. In 2020, the US Food and Drug Administration approved selpercatinib, a selective RET inhibitor, for adults with lung and thyroid cancers with RET rearrangements or mutations, making it the first targeted therapy to be approved for RET-altered cancers. While resistance to selective RET inhibition has been described, next-generation RET inhibitors are already being explored for patients who progress on prior RET kinase inhibitors.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineROS1Targeted therapyCancer researchLungLung cancerCrizotinibCarcinogenesisOncologyDiseaseAnaplastic lymphoma kinaseThyroid carcinomaKinaseThyroidInternal medicineCancerBioinformaticsAdenocarcinomaBiologyCell biologyMalignant pleural effusionLung Cancer Treatments and MutationsRNA modifications and cancerGenetic factors in colorectal cancer
Decade in review: a new era for RET-rearranged lung cancers | Litcius