In this edition of “How I will treat my next patient,” I take a look at two recent trials in non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). One summarizes a late analysis of a previously published randomized trial in stage IV NSCLC with three or fewer sites of metastasis – oligometastatic disease. The other reviews deidentified patient data to discern whether immune-targeted treatment might be valuable in particular subsets of NSCLC patients with EGFR mutations.
Local consolidative therapy
Daniel R. Gomez, MD, and colleagues published an updated analysis of progression-free survival (PFS) and an initial analysis of overall survival (OS) data in a randomized phase 2 trial in oligometastatic NSCLC. As originally published, patients were randomized to local consolidative treatment (LCT) versus standard maintenance therapy or observation (MT/O). Patients were required to have responding or stable disease after first-line systemic therapy prior to randomization.
Among the 49 patients who received LCT, there was a clear benefit of LCT (PFS of 14.2 months vs. 4.4 months for MT/O; P = .022; and median OS 41.2 months vs. 17.0 months; P = .017). The OS benefit was seen despite allowing crossover to LCT for patients who demonstrated disease progression in the MT/O arm.
What this means in practice
These data are exciting and move clinical research forward – if not, at this time, clinical practice. They support the ongoing clinical trials in NSCLC (NRG LU002) and breast cancer (NRG BR002) investigating the role of LCT in the oligometastatic setting.
For patients who are not candidates for (or choose not to participate in) these important phase 2R/3 trials, I believe that LCT should be discussed with all of the caveats that the authors appropriately mention, from the small number of patients because of the premature closure of the trial, to heterogeneous systemic regimens, to the lack of clarity on whether newer systemic therapies are better.