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Historically, HER2-mutated lung cancer was treated with cytotoxic chemotherapy, unlike other oncogene-driven cancers that used targeted therapies upfront. Zongertinib's approval as a first-line oral TKI marks a significant philosophical shift, aligning its treatment strategy with the biomarker-driven care standard in lung oncology.
Effective treatment of HER2-driven NSCLC requires more than just identifying mutations. HER2 is a multiplexed biomarker where both genetic mutations (TKD and non-TKD) and protein overexpression (via IHC) are independently actionable. Comprehensive testing is crucial to ensure patients are eligible for the full range of available targeted therapies, including TKIs and ADCs.
Comprehensive molecular testing (PD-L1, EGFR, ALK) is no longer reserved for advanced disease. It is now critical for all patients with stage 1B or higher resectable NSCLC *before* starting any treatment to guide neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapy decisions.
Even if randomized trials show zongertinib's efficacy is merely comparable to chemoimmunotherapy, its significantly milder safety profile—especially its lack of cardiac toxicity and manageable side effects—is expected to make it the preferred first-line choice. Patient quality of life and tolerability are becoming decisive factors in treatment selection.
NGS testing is revealing that acquired HER2 kinase domain mutations, not amplifications, are an emerging resistance mechanism in ER+ lobular breast cancer. This creates a targetable population for HER2 TKIs like neratinib or tucatinib, offering a new line of targeted therapy.
The new treatment paradigm for HER2-positive lung cancer will likely involve sequencing a TKI like zongertinib first, followed by an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC). Early data suggests that the efficacy of TKIs is significantly reduced when used after an ADC, making the TKI-first approach critical for maximizing patient outcomes.
The success of perioperative osimertinib means oncologists cannot choose the optimal strategy (targeted therapy vs. chemoimmunotherapy) for resectable lung cancer without first knowing the patient's EGFR, ALK, and PD-L1 status. This elevates biomarker profiling from a metastatic-setting tool to a critical first step in early-stage disease.
While TROP2-ADCs are currently approved for later-line lung cancer treatment, active clinical trials are already evaluating them as a potential replacement for traditional chemotherapy in the first-line setting. This represents a significant strategic ambition to shift the entire treatment paradigm for newly diagnosed patients with both non-small cell and small cell lung cancer.
The long-standing platinum doublet backbone for frontline SCLC may soon be challenged. The high efficacy of novel agents like antibody-drug conjugates and bispecific antibodies in later lines is prompting trials that consider moving them into the first-line setting, a strategy previously considered "unthinkable."
For patients with actionable mutations like EGFR or ALK, targeted therapy is the priority, regardless of PD-L1 score. Starting immunotherapy first in these patients can significantly increase the risk of developing severe pneumonitis (ILD) when they later switch to targeted therapy like osimertinib.
While zongertinib demonstrates high systemic efficacy with a 77% response rate, its efficacy in the central nervous system (CNS) is significantly lower at 44%. This gap highlights a critical challenge for patients with brain metastases and underscores the need for combination therapies or next-generation drugs with better CNS penetration.