Candidate mechanisms of acquired resistance to first-line osimertinib in EGFR-mutated advanced non-small cell lung cancer

Juliann Chmielecki(AstraZeneca (United States)), Jhanelle E. Gray(Moffitt Cancer Center), Ying Cheng, Yuichiro Ohe, Fumio Imamura(Osaka International Cancer Institute), Byoung Chul Cho(Yonsei University), Meng‐Chih Lin(Chang Gung University), Margarita Majem(Hospital de Sant Pau), Riyaz Shah(Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust), Yuri Rukazenkov(AstraZeneca (United Kingdom)), Alexander Todd(AstraZeneca (United Kingdom)), Aleksandra Markovets(AstraZeneca (United States)), J. Carl Barrett(AstraZeneca (United States)), Ryan J. Hartmaier(AstraZeneca (United States)), Suresh S. Ramalingam(Emory University)
Nature Communications
February 27, 2023
Cited by 234Open Access
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Abstract

Osimertinib, an epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor (EGFR-TKI), potently and selectively inhibits EGFR-TKI-sensitizing and EGFR T790M resistance mutations. In the Phase III FLAURA study (NCT02296125), first-line osimertinib improved outcomes vs comparator EGFR-TKIs in EGFRm advanced non-small cell lung cancer. This analysis identifies acquired resistance mechanisms to first-line osimertinib. Next-generation sequencing assesses circulating-tumor DNA from paired plasma samples (baseline and disease progression/treatment discontinuation) in patients with baseline EGFRm. No EGFR T790M-mediated acquired resistance are observed; most frequent resistance mechanisms are MET amplification (n = 17; 16%) and EGFR C797S mutations (n = 7; 6%). Future research investigating non-genetic acquired resistance mechanisms is warranted.


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