Current Oncology (Jul 2023)

Lorlatinib Effectiveness and Quality-of-Life in Patients with ALK-Positive NSCLC Who Had Failed Second-Generation ALK Inhibitors: Canadian Real-World Experience

  • Martin Rupp,
  • Fiorella Fanton-Aita,
  • Stephanie Snow,
  • Paul Wheatley-Price,
  • Barbara Melosky,
  • Rosalyn A. Juergens,
  • Quincy Chu,
  • Normand Blais,
  • Shantanu Banerji,
  • Ryan Ng,
  • Shoghag Khoudigian,
  • Arushi Sharma,
  • Phu Vinh On,
  • Geoffrey Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30070481
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 7
pp. 6559 – 6574

Abstract

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Lorlatinib is the only targeted therapy approved in Canada to treat patients with anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)-positive non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) whose tumor has progressed despite treatment with second-generation ALK tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), a patient population with high unmet need and lack of publicly reimbursed targeted treatments in Canada. We prospectively examined the real-world effectiveness and impact of lorlatinib on quality-of-life in 59 lorlatinib-treated patients, characterized as: median age of 62.0 years; 47.5% were female; 32.2% had central nervous system metastases; 50.8% had 2+ prior ALK TKI lines; and alectinib was the most common ALK TKI (72.9%) administered before lorlatinib, including 44.1% who received first-line alectinib. With a median follow-up of 15.3 months (IQR: 6.2–19.2), median time-to-treatment discontinuation of lorlatinib was 15.3 months (95% CI: 7.9–not reached), with 54.2% (95% CI: 40.8–65.9%) of patients without treatment discontinuation at 12 months. At baseline, the mean health utility score (HUS) was 0.744 (SD: 0.200). At 3 months, patients receiving lorlatinib demonstrated a 0.069 (95% CI: 0.020–0.118; p = 0.007) average HUS increase over baseline; HUS was maintained at 6 and 12 months. Thus, patients with ALK-positive NSCLC post second-generation ALK TKI remained on lorlatinib for a meaningful duration of time while their quality-of-life was preserved.

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