Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology (Apr 2021)

Phase III randomized study of carboplatin pemetrexed with or without bevacizumab with initial “at progression” cerebral radiotherapy in advanced non squamous non-small cell lung cancer with asymptomatic brain metastasis

  • Isabelle Monnet,
  • Alain Vergnenègre,
  • Gilles Robinet,
  • Henri Berard,
  • Regine Lamy,
  • Lionel Falchero,
  • Sabine Vieillot,
  • Roland Schott,
  • Charles Ricordel,
  • Stephane Chouabe,
  • Pascal Thomas,
  • Radj Gervais,
  • Anne Madroszyk,
  • Samir Abdiche,
  • Anne Marie Chiappa,
  • Laurent Greillier,
  • Chantal Decroisette,
  • Jean Bernard. Auliac,
  • Christos Chouaïd,

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/17588359211006983
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Background: The role and timing of whole or stereotaxic brain radiotherapy (BR) in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (aNSCLC) and asymptomatic brain metastases (aBMs) are not well established. This study investigates whether deferring BR until cerebral progression was superior to upfront BR for patients with aNSCLC and aBM. Methods: This open-label, multicenter, phase III trial, randomized (1:1) aNSCLC patients with aBMs to receive upfront BR and chemotherapy: platin–pemetrexed and bevacizumab in eligible patients, followed by maintenance pemetrexed with or without bevacizumab, BR arm, or the same chemotherapy with BR only at cerebral progression, chemotherapy (ChT) arm. Primary endpoint was progression-free survival (PFS), secondary endpoints were overall survival (OS), global, extra-cerebral and cerebral objective response rate (ORR), toxicity, and quality of life [ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02162537]. Results: The trial was stopped early because of slow recruitment. Among 95 included patients, 91 were randomized in 24 centers: 45 to BR and 46 to ChT arms (age: 60 ± 8.1, men: 79%, PS 0/1: 51.7%/48.3%; adenocarcinomas: 92.2%, extra-cerebral metastases: 57.8%, without differences between arms.) Significantly more patients in the BR-arm received BR compare with those in the ChT arm (87% versus 20%; p < 0.001); there were no significant differences between BR and ChT arms for median PFS: 4.7, 95% confidence interval (CI):3.4–7.5 versus 4.8, 95% CI: 2.4–6.5 months, for median OS: 8.5, 95% CI:.6–11.1 versus 8.3, 95% CI:4.5–11.5 months, cerebral and extra-cerebral ORR (27% versus 13%, p = 0.064, and 30% versus 41%, p = 0.245, respectively). The ChT arm had more grade 3/4 neutropenia than the BR arm (13% versus 6%, p = 0.045); others toxicities were comparable. Conclusion: The significant BR rate difference between the two arms suggests that upfront BR is not mandatory in aNSCLC with aBM but this trial failed to show that deferring BR for aBM is superior in terms of PFS from upfront BR.