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While research pursues mechanism-based strategies (e.g., 4th-gen TKIs) for acquired resistance, recent practical breakthroughs are mechanism-agnostic, like ADCs or chemotherapy combinations. This highlights a pragmatic, broad-spectrum approach to treating progression after frontline osimertinib.
The COMPEL study showed a near doubling of progression-free survival by continuing osimertinib with chemotherapy after first-line progression. This contradicts findings with first-generation TKIs (like gefitinib) and establishes "TKI continuation" as a new standard of care.
Real-world data suggests that using one antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) immediately after another is often ineffective. A potential strategy to overcome this resistance is to administer a different class of chemotherapy before starting the second ADC.
The FLORA two study's overall survival benefit was so compelling that clinicians should now default to osimertinib plus chemotherapy for most first-line EGFR-mutant NSCLC patients, only opting out for specific reasons like comorbidities or patient preference.
When EGFR+ NSCLC transforms to small cell, clinicians often continue the TKI osimertinib alongside chemotherapy. This practice is largely based on expert consensus and the rationale of suppressing any remaining EGFR-driven clones, rather than on definitive clinical trial data showing a clear benefit.
In the HARMONY A study, Ivanesimab plus chemotherapy significantly improved progression-free survival in EGFR-mutant non-small cell lung cancer patients. This is notable because prior trials showed that adding standard PD-1 inhibitors to chemotherapy was ineffective for this specific patient population.
Rather than moving through distinct lines of therapy, a future strategy could involve an "ADC switch." When a patient progresses on an ADC-IO combination, the IO backbone would remain while the ADC is swapped for one with a different, non-cross-resistant mechanism, adapting the treatment in real-time.
The presence of heterogeneous resistance mutations, some of which may be below detection limits, suggests a new strategy. Using a potent, broad-spectrum combination therapy upfront in the second-line setting, rather than sequential monotherapies, could eradicate more resistant clones and give patients a better chance at long-term survival or even a cure.
Unlike immunotherapy, neoadjuvant osimertinib yields poor pathologic complete response (pCR) rates. However, it significantly improves major pathologic response (MPR) and survival, suggesting pCR may be the wrong efficacy endpoint for cytostatic EGFR TKIs, which have a different mechanism of action than immunotherapy.
In notoriously hard-to-treat small cell lung cancer (SCLC), ADCs are emerging as a crucial next step. They hold promise for patients who progress after chemoimmunotherapy and newer targeted agents like tarlatamab, a setting where treatment options are currently scarce. ADCs could provide meaningful responses in this significant unmet need.
A key strategy for Iterion is combining its Wnt-beta-catenin inhibitor with existing therapies like EGFR-TKIs. Research shows the Wnt pathway is often upregulated as a resistance mechanism to these primary treatments. By blocking this escape route, the combination therapy aims to prevent resistance and improve patient outcomes.