EGFRMutations Predict Survival Benefit From Gefitinib in Patients With Advanced Lung Adenocarcinoma: A Historical Comparison of Patients Treated Before and After Gefitinib Approval in Japan

Author:

Takano Toshimi1,Fukui Tomoya1,Ohe Yuichiro1,Tsuta Koji1,Yamamoto Seiichiro1,Nokihara Hiroshi1,Yamamoto Noboru1,Sekine Ikuo1,Kunitoh Hideo1,Furuta Koh1,Tamura Tomohide1

Affiliation:

1. From the Division of Internal Medicine; Clinical Laboratory Division; Statistics and Cancer Control Division, Research Center for Cancer Prevention and Screening; and Clinical Support Laboratory, National Cancer Center Hospital; and the Department of Medical Oncology, Teikyo University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

PurposeThis study evaluated whether the presence of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutations is a predictive marker for survival benefit from gefitinib and/or a prognostic marker in patients with advanced lung adenocarcinoma.Patients and MethodsOverall survival (OS) was compared between patients with advanced lung adenocarcinoma who began first-line systemic therapy before and after gefitinib approval in Japan (January 1999 to July 2001 and July 2002 to December 2004, respectively). Deletional mutations in exon 19 or the L858R mutation in exon 21 of EGFR were evaluated using high-resolution melting analysis.ResultsEGFR mutations were detected in 136 (41%) of the 330 patients included in this study. OS was significantly longer among the EGFR-mutant patients treated after gefitinib approval compared with the OS of patients treated before gefitinib approval (median survival time [MST], 27.2 v 13.6 months, respectively; P < .001), whereas no significant survival improvement was observed in patients without EGFR mutations (MST, 13.2 v 10.4 months, respectively; P = .13). A significant interaction between the presence of EGFR mutations and a survival improvement was seen (P = .045). Among patients treated before gefitinib approval, those with EGFR mutations lived longer than those without EGFR mutations (MST, 13.6 v 10.4 months, respectively; P = .034). The response rates to first-line cytotoxic chemotherapy were not significantly different between patients with and without EGFR mutations (31% v 28%, respectively; P = .50).ConclusionEGFR mutations significantly predict both a survival benefit from gefitinib and a favorable prognosis in patients with advanced lung adenocarcinoma.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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