1. Pooled analysis of drug-related interstitial lung disease and/or pneumonitis in nine trastuzumab deruxtecan monotherapy studies
- Author
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Powell, C. A., Modi, S., Iwata, H., Takahashi, S., Smit, E. F., Siena, S., Chang, D. Y., Macpherson, E., Qin, A., Singh, J., Taitt, C., Shire, N., Camidge, D. Ross, and CCA - Cancer Treatment and quality of life
- Subjects
interstitial lung disease ,Cancer Research ,Immunoconjugates ,adverse event ,pneumonitis ,Pneumonia ,Trastuzumab ,trastuzumab deruxtecan ,Oncology ,HER2 ,Humans ,Camptothecin ,Lung Diseases, Interstitial ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Introduction: This pooled analysis of nine phase I and II trastuzumab deruxtecan (T-DXd) monotherapy studies described drug-related interstitial lung disease (ILD)/pneumonitis in patients treated with T-DXd. Methods: Patients who received T-DXd across nine studies were included. Investigator-assessed ILD/pneumonitis events were retrospectively reviewed by an independent adjudication committee; events adjudicated as drug-related ILD/pneumonitis are summarized. Results: The analysis included 1150 patients (breast cancer, 44.3%; gastric cancer, 25.6%; lung cancer, 17.7%; colorectal cancer, 9.3%; other cancer, 3.0%). Median treatment duration was 5.8 (range, 0.7-56.3) months, with a median of 4 (range, 1-27) prior lines of therapy. The overall incidence of adjudicated drug-related ILD/pneumonitis was 15.4% (grade 5, 2.2%). Most patients with ILD/pneumonitis experienced low-grade events (grade 1 or 2, 77.4%); 87.0% had their first event within 12 months [median, 5.4 (range, 6.4 mg/kg, oxygen saturation 4 years. Conclusions: In this pooled analysis of heavily treated patients, the incidence of ILD/pneumonitis was 15.4%, with most being low grade and occurring in the first 12 months of treatment. The benefit–risk of T-DXd treatment is positive; however, some patients may be at increased risk of developing ILD/pneumonitis, and further investigation is needed to confirm ILD/pneumonitis risk factors. Close monitoring and proactive management of ILD/pneumonitis are warranted for all.
- Published
- 2022
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