Litcius/Paper detail

ALK TKI therapy in patients with ALK-positive non-small cell lung cancer and brain metastases: A review of the literature and local experiences

İrfan Çiçin, Claudio Martín, Carolina Kawamura Haddad, Sang‐We Kim, Alexey Smolin, Arif Abdillah, Xue Yang

2022Critical Reviews in Oncology/Hematology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article reviews the role of ALK tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) in the literature and provides expert commentary on local use in Argentina, Brazil, China, Russia, South Korea, and Turkey. We identified 56 articles involving patients with ALK-positive non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and brain metastases (BM) treated with ALK TKIs published between January 2000 and June 2021. In first-line settings, central nervous system response rates in clinical trials with alectinib (86-94%), brigatinib (67-78%), and lorlatinib (42-82%) were generally higher than those reported with crizotinib (16-71%). Median progression-free survival in patients receiving crizotinib (5.6-7.4 months) was lower than alectinib (not reached), brigatinib (24.0 months), and ceritinib (10.7-25.2 months). Across these counties, next-generation TKIs are preferred for patients with progressing BM lesions. Although next-generation ALK TKIs demonstrate significant activity in these patients and following progression on crizotinib, access remains a challenge for personalized therapy.

Topics & Concepts

CrizotinibAlectinibCeritinibMedicineLung cancerOncologyInternal medicineALK inhibitorAnaplastic lymphoma kinaseClinical trialTyrosine-kinase inhibitorTargeted therapyCancerMalignant pleural effusionLung Cancer Treatments and MutationsLung Cancer Research StudiesLung Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment