loader from loading.io

Therapy for Stage IV NSCLC With Driver Alterations: ASCO Living Guideline Update 2023.3 Part 2

ASCO Guidelines

Release Date: 02/28/2024

Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for Newly Diagnosed, Advanced Ovarian Cancer Guideline Update show art Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for Newly Diagnosed, Advanced Ovarian Cancer Guideline Update

ASCO Guidelines

Dr. Stéphanie Gaillard and Dr. Bill Tew share updates to the evidence-based guideline on neoadjuvant chemotherapy for newly diagnosed, advanced ovarian cancer. They highlight recommendations across ten clinical questions, addressing initial assessment, primary cytoreductive surgery, neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT), tests and/or procedures that should be completed before NACT, preferred chemotherapy regimens, timing of interval cytoreductive surgery (ICS), hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC), post ICS-chemotherapy, maintenance therapy, and options for those without a clinical...

info_outline
Germline and Somatic Genomic Testing for Metastatic Prostate Cancer Guideline show art Germline and Somatic Genomic Testing for Metastatic Prostate Cancer Guideline

ASCO Guidelines

Dr. Evan Yu presents the new evidence-based guideline on genetic testing for metastatic prostate cancer. He discusses who should receive germline and somatic testing with next-generation sequencing technologies, what samples are preferred for testing, and the therapeutic & prognosistc impacts of genetic testing. Dr. Yu emphasizes the need for awareness and refers to areas of active investigation and future research to improve personalized therapies for patients with metastatic prostate cancer.  Read the full guideline, “” at TRANSCRIPT This guideline, clinical tools, and...

info_outline
Treatment of Pleural Mesothelioma Update show art Treatment of Pleural Mesothelioma Update

ASCO Guidelines

Dr. Hedy Kindler joins us on the podcast to discuss the latest update to the treatment of pleural mesothelioma guideline. She discusses the latest changes to the updated recommendations across topics including surgery, immunotherapy, chemotherapy, pathology, and germline testing. Dr. Kindler describes the impact of this guideline and the need for ongoing research in the field. Read the full guideline update, “” at www.asco.org/thoracic-cancer-guidelines.   TRANSCRIPT This guideline, clinical tools, and resources are available at . Read the full text of the guideline and...

info_outline
Systemic Therapy for Stage I-III Anal Squamous Cell Carcinoma Guideline show art Systemic Therapy for Stage I-III Anal Squamous Cell Carcinoma Guideline

ASCO Guidelines

Dr. Van Morris presents the new evidence-based guideline on systemic therapy for localized anal squamous cell carcinoma. Dr. Morris discusses the key recommendations from the Expert Panel, including recommended radiosensitizing chemotherapy agents, dosing and schedule recommendations, the role of induction chemotherapy and ongoing adjuvant chemotherapy, and considerations for special populations. He emphasizes the importance of this first guideline from ASCO on anal squamous cell carcinoma for both clinicians and patients with stage I-III anal cancer, and ongoing research the panel is looking...

info_outline
Systemic Therapy for SCLC Rapid Update show art Systemic Therapy for SCLC Rapid Update

ASCO Guidelines

Dr. Greg Kalemkerian reviews the latest evidence-based rapid update from the Expert Panel on systemic therapy for small cell lung cancer. He discusses the updated recommendations for patients with limited-stage SCLC based on the ADRIATIC trial, and for patients with relapsed SCLC based on the DeLLphi-301 trial. Dr. Kalemkerian shares insights on what these changes mean for clinicians and patients, and highlights new trials in progress to provide more options for patients diagnosed with SCLC. Read the full rapid update, “” at . TRANSCRIPT This guideline, clinical tools, and resources are...

info_outline
Therapy for Stage IV NSCLC With Driver Alterations: ASCO Living Guideline Update 2024.2 show art Therapy for Stage IV NSCLC With Driver Alterations: ASCO Living Guideline Update 2024.2

ASCO Guidelines

Dr. Lyudmila Bazheova share the latest updates to the ASCO living guideline on therapy for stage IV non-small cell lung cancer with driver alterations. She discusses changes for patients with EGFR driver alterations in both the first- and second-line setting, and reviews the evidence supporting these updated recommendations, from trials such as MARIPOSA, MARIPOSA-2, CheckMate 722, and KEYNOTE-789. Stay tuned for future updates to this continuously updated guideline. Read the full update, “.” at . TRANSCRIPT This guideline, clinical tools, and resources are available at . Read...

info_outline
Management of Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer Guideline show art Management of Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer Guideline

ASCO Guidelines

Dr. Sepideh Gholami and Dr. Aaron Scott join us to discuss the latest evidence-based guideline from ASCO on the management of locally advanced rectal cancer. They review the recommendation highlights on topics including assessment, total neoadjuvant therapy, timing of chemotherapy, nonoperative management, and immunotherapy. Additionally, we discuss the importance of this guideline for both clinicians and patients, and the outstanding research questions in the management of locally advanced rectal cancer. Read the full guideline, “” at . TRANSCRIPT  This guideline, clinical tools,...

info_outline
Management of Stage III NSCLC Rapid Update show art Management of Stage III NSCLC Rapid Update

ASCO Guidelines

Dr. Megan Daly presents the latest rapid recommendation update to the ASCO management of stage III NSCLC guideline, based on data from the phase III randomized LAURA trial, presented at the 2024 ASCO Annual Meeting, and subsequently published. She discusses the results of the trial, shares the updated recommendation from the expert panel, and the impact for both clinicians and patients. We also discuss future research in the area and exciting new developments to watch out for in the field. Read the full rapid update, “” at . TRANSCRIPT   This guideline, clinical tools, and...

info_outline
Selection of Germline Genetic Testing Panels in Patients with Cancer Guideline show art Selection of Germline Genetic Testing Panels in Patients with Cancer Guideline

ASCO Guidelines

Ms. Charité Ricker, MS, CGC and Dr. Nadine Tung, MD, FASCO share updates from the new ASCO guideline on selection of germline genetic testing panels in patients with cancer. They discuss highlights on family history collection, when and how multigene panel germline genetic testing should be used, which genes are generally recommended for testing, and how germline genetic testing interfaces with somatic genetic testing. Ms. Ricker and Dr. Tung also note the importance of the guideline and the impact of these new recommendations on clinicians and patients with cancer. Read the full guideline,...

info_outline
Therapy for Stage IV NSCLC With Driver Alterations: ASCO Living Guideline Update 2024.1 show art Therapy for Stage IV NSCLC With Driver Alterations: ASCO Living Guideline Update 2024.1

ASCO Guidelines

Dr. Jyoti Patel discusses the latest update to the stage IV NSCLC with driver alterations living guideline, specifically for patients with EGFR or ROS1 alterations. She shares the latest recommendations based on recently published evidence, such as the FLAURA2, MARIPOSA-2, and TRIDENT-1 trials. Dr. Patel talks about how to choose between these new options and the impact for patients living with stage IV NSCLC, as well as novel drugs the panel is monitoring for future guideline updates. Read the full living guideline update “Therapy for Stage IV Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer With Driver...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Dr. Natash Leighl and Dr. Jyoti Patel are back on the podcast to discuss the update to the living guideline on stage IV NSCLC with driver alterations. This guideline includes recommendations for first-, second-, and subsequent-line therapy for patients with driver alterations including: EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAFV600E, MET exon skipping mutation, RET rearrangement, NTRK rearrangement, HER2, and KRAS G12C. They highlight the key changes to the recommendations, addition of recent trials, the importance of biomarker testing, and the impact of this guideline for clinicians and patients living with advanced NSCLC. Stay tuned for future updates to this continuously updated guideline.

Read the full update, “Therapy for Stage IV Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer With Driver Alterations: ASCO Living Guideline, Version 2023.3” at www.asco.org/living-guidelines.

TRANSCRIPT

This guideline, clinical tools, and resources are available at http://www.asco.org/living-guidelines. Read the full text of the guideline and review authors’ disclosures of potential conflicts of interest in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, https://ascopubs.org/doi/10.1200/JCO.23.02744.   

Brittany Harvey: Hello, and welcome to the ASCO Guidelines podcast, one of ASCO's podcasts delivering timely information to keep you up to date on the latest changes, challenges, and advances in oncology. You can find all the shows, including this one, at asco.org/podcasts.   

My name is Brittany Harvey, and today I am interviewing Dr. Jyoti Patel and Dr. Natasha Leighl, co-chairs on “Therapy for Stage IV Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer With Driver Alterations: ASCO Living Guideline, Version 2023.3.” Thank you for being here, Dr. Patel and Dr. Leighl. 

And before we discuss this guideline, I would like to note that ASCO takes great care in the development of its guidelines and ensuring that the ASCO conflict of interest policy is followed for each guideline. The disclosures of potential conflicts of interest for the guideline panel, including Dr. Patel and Dr. Leighl, who have joined us here today, are available online with the publication of the guideline in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, which is linked in the show notes.

So, to start us off on this living clinical practice guideline, Dr. Leighl, this guideline for systemic therapy for patients with stage four non-small cell lung cancer with driver alterations is being routinely updated. What new data was reviewed in this full update to the living guideline?

Dr. Natasha Leighl: Thanks so much, Brittany. So, we looked through the literature for publications between February and the end of October 2023, and also any novel agents that were approved, in particular by the United States FDA, to really incorporate this update in the current guidelines. In particular, we had updates in EGFR-driven tumors, BRAF and RET-driven tumors. And we also worked very hard to make this more digestible. In particular, it was turning into a bit of a laundry list of all of the things that we had ever recommended. So we really wanted to shorten things, pare them down, and really make them helpful and very, very current for the treatment of people with lung cancer in 2023 and 2024.

Brittany Harvey: Excellent. Thank you for providing that overview of the evidence reviewed and the key updates that we will address in this guideline. So then I would like to talk about some of those key updated recommendations from the expert panel. You mentioned both EGFR, BRAF, and RET. So starting with patients with stage IV non-small cell lung cancer with EGFR alterations, Dr. Leighl, what are the key changes to those recommendations?

Dr. Natasha Leighl: So, as I said, we really started to get quite a long list of things we recommended, including drugs that, to be honest, we no longer think are what we should lead with first-line. So we updated the recommendation to recommend first-line osimertinib in patients with sensitizing mutations. We were also able to capture in this update for patients with EGFR exon 20 insertion mutant lung cancer, the data from the randomized PAPILLON trial, recommending amivantamab plus chemotherapy for progression-free survival benefit. Not yet an overall survival benefit, but we will see how these data mature. 

The other thing that we did was we moved all of the- I don't want to call them "legacy agents" because, in many countries, these are still very important. But older agents such as gefitinib, approaches such as gefitinib plus chemotherapy, and drugs like dacomitinib and other agents where we truly believe as an international panel that we would prefer a third-generation kinase inhibitor like osimertinib. We moved all of those to our discussion, just to recognize that, around the world, not everybody may have access. And we also specified that things are different in different countries. So, for example, in China, there are other third-generation kinase inhibitors with randomized data to support their use. And those are approved and used in China. And also, for example, in Korea, there are other agents that are used. So, we have really tried to be both inclusive and yet keep things simple at the same time. And hopefully, we have succeeded. 

One of the challenges was that, with all of the updates that we made, we did not have all of the publications out yet at the end of October to make recommendations about moving beyond osimertinib in the first-line setting. So, please stay tuned for the next guideline update, where we’re going to tackle whether we should give osimertinib alone or combination therapy.

Brittany Harvey: Excellent. Thank you for providing those updates and clarifications for those patients with non-small cell lung cancer and an EGFR alteration. And we will look forward to the guideline panel's review of that evidence and future updates as well.

So then, Dr. Leighl, you had previously mentioned that additional recommendations were updated, such as those for patients with BRAF alterations and RET alterations. So, Dr. Patel, what are the other key updated recommendations from the expert panel?

Dr. Jyoti Patel: Thanks so much, Brittany. So certainly, I think we have seen many of these trials mature over time, which has been fantastic. I think one remarkable achievement was the reporting of a phase III selpercatinib trial. This was a trial in the front-line setting, in which patients who were RET-positive were randomized to selpercatinib versus carboplatin-based chemotherapy. And the selpercatinib significantly outperformed platinum-based chemotherapy, and I think really demonstrated a significant improvement in progression-free survival. So, based on that phase III trial, the recommendation for selpercatinib was elevated. Many of these agents that are used in clinical practice are approved initially on smaller phase I or phase II trials. And so, seeing the maturity of these phase III trials gives clinicians and patients greater certainty that these agents are really effective. And so, the evidence was increased for that, and that's now a preferred agent over another TKI, pralsetinib, in which there is only phase II data. So, certainly, those kinds of real things that we can explain to patients are important in these guidelines. 

Another thing that we were able to update was another doublet for BRAF V600E non-small cell lung cancer. So, the combination of the two TKIs, encorafenib and binimetinib, was also included in the guidelines. 

One thing that we tried to help was really identifying the best therapy post-progression on these first-generation TKIs. And again, there is a paucity of data, but often we went back to carboplatin-based doublets, and there is some data regarding whether or not patients with driver alterations should get immunotherapy in the second-line setting. And so, certainly, I think we have a number of randomized studies for patients with classical EGFR mutations, and our recommendation is generally avoidance of immunotherapy for these patients and treating many of these patients with carboplatin and pemetrexed when appropriate. I do not think we have the data for a lot of other subsets of patients. So, again, stay tuned as these data evolve.

Brittany Harvey: Thank you for reviewing those updated recommendations and the supporting evidence. I think it's helpful for our listeners to understand the level of evidence behind these recommendations as well. 

So then, Dr. Leighl, what should clinicians know as they implement these new and updated recommendations?

Dr. Natasha Leighl: It's really important, first of all, to make sure that you have the information that you need to get your patients to these great new treatments as part of the shared decision-making process. So your patients need biomarker testing. You need to get that as quickly as you can. As Dr. Patel has highlighted, you really want to get that before they start their first-line therapy, if at all possible. We also really tried to bring out in this guideline that when things are delayed, I mean, this is the real world that we live in, just to be very cautious of immunotherapy with chemotherapy for that first cycle. That obviously, again, is a discussion with your patient, but this concept that the approach of a cycle of chemotherapy while you wait for the next-generation sequencing testing. And then if the patient does not have a driver alteration, adding any other therapy as appropriate is okay. It's something that people do. We believe it's important as we talk about the balance between benefits and harms. And so I think that's in there for clinicians, and I hope that they and patients can really benefit from that to avoid toxicity and also to really improve the ability to get molecular testing results first line. 

Also, I think it's really important that when people read the wording of the guidelines, that this really follows GRADE, which is a type of system that we use to develop our recommendations. And so things like "may" do not mean that you shouldn't do it. So sometimes we'll hear back from clinicians and say, "Well, you said that they may use alectinib or lorlatinib, for example, with ALK, and I can only get coverage for one or the other." And so I think it's really important that clinicians and patients recognize that all of the things that we do recommend, even if we do use the word "may" or the recommendation is more conditional, we do think that these agents should be available for patients and clinicians, and that they go through this shared decision-making process together. 

And so I think that's something that clinicians, we hope, can help take forward as they advocate for their patients to get access to these different and new and emerging treatments that have clearly shown benefit. Even when we say patients and clinicians may use this or that, there may be excellent reasons for using something newer, that’s emerged, perhaps for toxicity benefits or benefits in terms of efficacy, even though we can't compare directly. And so we really want clinicians and patients to be empowered to access these new compounds and these new exciting agents that are in our guidelines.

Brittany Harvey: Absolutely. Thank you for reviewing those key points. And, yes, that's a great comment that the level of obligation in the recommendations may be based on the evidence quality, but that doesn't mean that clinicians and patients shouldn't have access to all of the recommended treatment options to offer patients based off their individual patient and clinical characteristics. 

So then, Dr. Patel, in your view, how will these changes affect patients with non-small cell lung cancer, with driver alterations? 

Dr. Jyoti Patel: A lot of this echoes the points made by Dr. Leighl. I think there are opportunities for patients to assess toxicity or what it means for intensification of therapy. So, particularly for EGFR patients, for example, we have data that chemotherapy with osimertinib can improve progression-free survival, or the incorporation of a bispecific antibody, amivantamab, can improve progression-free survival over the TKI alone. It certainly comes with increased toxicity. And so how we weigh this in the absence of a known survival benefit at this juncture is one that, again, really gives patients the opportunity to prioritize what's important for them. And so I think this guideline affects patients and that we have multiple options, we help with the weight of the evidence so they may be able to better discern what treatment makes sense for them.

Brittany Harvey: Understood. Yes, this guideline provides lots of options for different patients based off their driver alterations. So it's helpful to have that information for shared decision-making with their clinicians. 

So then finally, to wrap us up, Dr. Leighl, what current research is the living guideline expert panel monitoring for updates to the guideline recommendations?

Dr. Natasha Leighl: This process of the living guidelines has really been to help us stay on top of the amazing and incredibly rapid progress that we're making in lung cancer and other cancers. And even with this process, where we're trying to stay up-to-the-minute, there have already been some changes in the literature between the start of November and now. And so we're already working on some additional commentary and options for the first-line treatment of patients with EGFR-mutant lung cancer. Also, the subsequent treatment of patients with EGFR-mutant lung cancer, depending on what they've had before. Also, a great new study in patients with ROS1 fusion-driven lung cancer. And so these are some of the things that we're looking at.  

Also, a bit more discussion about the importance of molecular testing. In our companion article, the Journal of Oncology Practice, along with Dr. Patel, we're going to be talking a bit more about new ways to genotype, for example, using both liquid biopsy and tumor tissue at the same time, and some of the support for that and how it gets us with our patients to the answers that they need faster. 

Brittany Harvey: Absolutely. The pace of research in non-small cell lung cancer has moved quite quickly. So we definitely appreciate the panel's efforts to review all of this evidence on a continuous basis and take the time to develop these guideline recommendations for both clinicians and patients with non-small cell lung cancer. 

So I want to thank you so much for your work to update these guidelines, and thank you for your time today, Dr. Patel and Dr. Leighl.

Dr. Natasha Leighl: Thanks so much. It's a real pleasure to be here.

Dr. Jyoti Patel: Thank you. 

Brittany Harvey: And thank you to all of our listeners for tuning in to the ASCO Guidelines podcast. To read the full guideline, go to www.asco.org/living-guidelines. You can also find many of our guidelines and interactive resources in the free ASCO Guidelines app, available in the Apple App Store or the Google Play Store. If you have enjoyed what you've heard today, please rate and review the podcast, and be sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode. 

The purpose of this podcast is to educate and inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions.  

Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. Guest statements on the podcast do not express the opinions of ASCO. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement.