The investigators were to explore whether high-dose Furmonertinib, compared with osimertinib, could achieve longer survival in patients with EGFR-mutated NSCLC with CNS metastasis.
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer incidence and death worldwide. Non-small cell lung cancer accounts for about 80-85%, and EGFR mutations occur in about 45-55% of the Asian population. In newly diagnosed NSCLC patients, the rate of brain metastases in advanced NSCLC can be as high as 25% to 44%. The brain metastasis rate of advanced lung adenocarcinoma with EGFR mutation can reach 60%. For NSCLC patients with CNS metastases and EGFR mutations, the PFS of EGFR-TKIs was improved compared with chemotherapy, but neither was satisfactory, even with Osimertinib (third-generation EGFR-TKI). The PFS of patients with CNS metastases treated with Osimertinib was only 15.23 months. Therefore, the diagnosis and treatment of lung cancer patients with brain metastases is still a difficult problem to improve the long-term survival rate of lung cancer. Clinical data and early preclinical studies have shown that Furmonertinib(AST2818) can effectively inhibit the classical mutation of EGFR, especially for intracranial lesions, and is well tolerated. In the FURLONG study, the PFS of patients with CNS metastases was 20.8 months and the ORR were 91%, respectively. This may be due to the unique molecular structure of Furmonertinib, which has the advantage of "double entry into the brain". Furthermore, the investigators' previous research showed that patients treated with 160mg of Furmonertinib after third-generation EGFR-TKIs treatment resistance were divided into intracranial progression mode group and extracranial progression mode group, and finally proven that Furmonertinib 160mg with or without antiangiogenic agents could be an option for patients with advanced NSCLC who have developed resistance after third-generation EGFR-TKIs, especially those who have developed resistance due to intracranial lesion progression. Based on above, the investigators propose to develop a multi-center, randomized, controlled, prospective, Phase II clinical trial in order to explore whether high-dose Furmonertinib could achieve longer survival in patients with EGFR-mutated NSCLC with CNS metastasis, particularly long-term control of intracranial lesions.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
255
Furmonertinib, 160mg po qd
Osimertinib,80mg po qd
progression free survival(PFS)
The time from the start of randomization until the first occurrence of disease. progression or death from any cause, whichever occurs first.
Time frame: 5 years from first patient randomized.
objective response rate(ORR)
The proportion of patients with a complete or partial response
Time frame: Duration of time from the start of treatment to the end of study, assessed up to 5 years
Intracranial objective Response Rate(iORR)
The proportion of patients with a complete or partial response of intracranial tumors
Time frame: Duration of time from the start of treatment to the end of study, assessed up to 5 years
Intracranial progression free survival(iPFS)
The time from the beginning of randomization to the first occurrence of objective progression or death of intracranial tumors, whichever occurs first.
Time frame: 5 years from first patient randomized.
overal survival time(OS)
The time from randomization to death from any cause
Time frame: 5 years from first patient randomized.
Disease control rate(DCR)
the proportion of patients with a complete response, partial response, or stable disease
Time frame: Duration of time from the start of treatment to the end of study, assessed up to 5 years
Intracranial disease control rate(iDCR)
the proportion of patients with a complete response, partial response, or stable disease(≥6w) of intracranial tumors
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Time frame: Duration of time from the start of treatment to the end of study, assessed up to 5 years
Depth of response (DepOR)
best percentage change in the sum of the longest diameter of target lesions compared with baseline in patients without progression of non-target lesions and the occurrence of new lesions
Time frame: Duration of time from the start of treatment to the end of study, assessed up to 5 years
Depth of intracranial response(iDepOR)
best percentage change in the sum of the longest diameter of target lesions in CNS compared with baseline in patients without progression of non-target lesions and the occurrence of new lesions
Time frame: Duration of time from the start of treatment to the end of study, assessed up to 5 years
Time to intracranial remission(iTTR)
The time from randomization to the first assessment of CR or PR for intracranial tumor.
Time frame: 5 years from first patient randomized.
Duration of response(DoR)
The time from the date of first documented response to the date of disease progression or death, whichever occurred first.
Time frame: 5 years from first patient randomized.
Duration of intracranial response(iDoR)
The time from the date of first documented response in CNS to the date of disease progression or death, whichever occurred first.
Time frame: 5 years from first patient randomized.
Rate of improvement in neural function
Changes in Karnofsky scores and neuro-oncology Scale scores from baseline
Time frame: Duration of time from the start of treatment to the end of study, assessed up to 5 years
Health-related quality of life
Changes in FACT-L scale scores from baseline
Time frame: Duration of time from the start of treatment to the end of study, assessed up to 5 years
Adverse events
The type, frequency, severity, and degree of treatment-related adverse events (according to CTCAE version 5.0)
Time frame: Duration of time from the start of treatment to the end of study, assessed up to 5 years