Efficacy and safety of lurbinectedin and doxorubicin in relapsed small cell lung cancer: results from an expansion cohort of a phase I study

Other authors

Institut Català de la Salut

[Olmedo ME] Hospital Ramon y Cajal, Madrid, Spain. [Forster M, Flynn M] University College of London Hospital and UCL Cancer Institute, London, UK. [Moreno V] START Madrid – FJD (Hospital Fundación Jiménez Díaz), Madrid, Spain. [López-Criado MP] M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Madrid, Spain. [Braña I] Vall d’Hebron Hospital Universitari, Barcelona, Spain

Vall d'Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus

Publication date

2022-06-29T06:58:19Z

2022-06-29T06:58:19Z

2021-10



Abstract

Lurbinectedin; Phase I study; Small cell lung cancer


Lurbinectedina; Estudio fase I; Cáncer de pulmón de células pequeñas


Lurbinectedina; Estudi de fase I; Càncer de pulmó de cèl·lules petites


Background A phase I study found remarkable activity and manageable toxicity for doxorubicin (bolus) plus lurbinectedin (1-h intravenous [i.v.] infusion) on Day 1 every three weeks (q3wk) as second-line therapy in relapsed small cell lung cancer (SCLC). An expansion cohort further evaluated this combination. Patients and methods Twenty-eight patients with relapsed SCLC after no more than one line of cytotoxic-containing chemotherapy were treated: 18 (64%) with sensitive disease (chemotherapy-free interval [CTFI] ≥90 days) and ten (36%) with resistant disease (CTFI <90 days; including six with refractory disease [CTFI ≤30 days]). Results Ten patients showed confirmed response (overall response rate [ORR] = 36%); median progression-free survival (PFS) = 3.3 months; median overall survival (OS) = 7.9 months. ORR was 50% in sensitive disease (median PFS = 5.7 months; median OS = 11.5 months) and 10% in resistant disease (median PFS = 1.3 months; median OS = 4.6 months). The main toxicity was transient and reversible myelosuppression. Treatment-related non-hematological events (fatigue, nausea, decreased appetite, vomiting, alopecia) were mostly mild or moderate. Conclusion Doxorubicin 40 mg/m2 and lurbinectedin 2.0 mg/m2 on Day 1 q3wk has shown noteworthy activity in relapsed SCLC and a manageable safety profile. The combination is being evaluated as second-line therapy for SCLC in an ongoing, randomized phase III trial. Clinical trial registration www.ClinicalTrials.gov code: NCT01970540. Date of registration: 22 October, 2013.


This work was supported by Pharma Mar, S.A.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Springer

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Attribution 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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