Cohen Martin H, Williams Grant A, Sridhara Rajeshwari, Chen Gang, McGuinn W David, Morse David, Abraham Sophia, Rahman Atiqur, Liang Chenyi, Lostritto Richard, Baird Amy, Pazdur Richard
Division of Oncology Drug Products, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, United States Food and Drug Administration, Rockville, Maryland 20857, USA.
Clin Cancer Res. 2004 Feb 15;10(4):1212-8. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-03-0564.
On May 5, 2003, gefitinib (Iressa; ZD1839) 250-mg tablets (AstraZeneca Inc.) received accelerated approval by the United States Food and Drug Administration as monotherapy for patients with locally advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer after failure of both platinum-based and docetaxel chemotherapies. Information provided in this summary includes chemistry manufacturing and controls, clinical pharmacology, and clinical trial efficacy and safety results. Gefitinib is an anilinoquinazoline compound with the chemical name 4-quinazolinamine,N-(3-chloro-4-flurophenyl)-7-methoxy-6-[3-(4-morpholinyl)propoxy]. It has the molecular formula C(22)H(24)ClFN(4)O(3). Gefitinib is often referred to as a "specific" or "selective" inhibitor of epidermal growth factor receptor. Studies demonstrate, however, that gefitinib inhibits the activity of other intracellular transmembrane tyrosine-specific protein kinases at concentrations similar to those at which it inhibits the epidermal growth factor signal. Maximum plasma concentrations resulting from clinically relevant doses are 0.5-1 microM or more, well within the IC(50) values of several tyrosine kinases. No clinical studies have been performed that demonstrate a correlation between epidermal growth factor receptor expression and response to gefitinib. Gefitinib is 60% available after oral administration and is widely distributed throughout the body. Gefitinib is extensively metabolized in the liver by cytochrome P450 3A4 enzyme. Over a 10-day period, approximately 86% of an orally administered radioactive dose is recovered in the feces, with <4% of the dose in the urine. After daily oral administration, steady-state plasma levels are reached in 10 days and are 2-fold higher than those achieved after single doses. Gefitinib effectiveness was demonstrated in a randomized, double-blind, Phase II, multicenter trial comparing two oral doses of gefitinib (250 versus 500 mg/day). A total of 216 patients were enrolled. The 142 patients who were refractory to or intolerant of a platinum and docetaxel comprised the evaluable population for the efficacy analysis. A partial tumor response occurred in 14% (9 of 66) of patients receiving 250 mg/day gefitinib and in 8% (6 of 76) of patients receiving 500 mg/day gefitinib. The overall objective response rate (RR) for both doses combined was 10.6% (15 of 142 patients; 95% confidence interval, 6.0-16.8%). Responses were more frequent in females and in nonsmokers. The median duration of response was 7.0 months (range, 4.6-18.6+ months). Other submitted data included the results of two large trials conducted in chemotherapy-naive, stage III and IV non-small cell lung cancer patients. Patients were randomized to receive gefitinib (250 or 500 mg daily) or placebo, in combination with either gemcitabine plus cisplatin (n = 1093) or carboplatin plus paclitaxel (n = 1037). Results from this study showed no benefit (RR, time to progression, or survival) from adding gefitinib to chemotherapy. Consequently, gefinitib is only recommended for use as monotherapy. Common adverse events associated with gefitinib treatment included diarrhea, rash, acne, dry skin, nausea, and vomiting. Interstitial lung disease has been observed in patients receiving gefitinib. Worldwide, the incidence of interstitial lung disease was about 1% (2% in the Japanese post-marketing experience and about 0.3% in a United States expanded access program). Approximately one-third of the cases have been fatal. Gefitinib was approved under accelerated approval regulations on the basis of a surrogate end point, RR. No controlled gefitinib trials, to date, demonstrate a clinical benefit, such as improvement in disease-related symptoms or increased survival. Accelerated approval regulations require the sponsor to conduct additional studies to verify that gefitinib therapy produces such benefit.
2003年5月5日,吉非替尼(易瑞沙;ZD1839)250毫克片剂(阿斯利康公司)获得美国食品药品监督管理局加速批准,作为铂类和多西他赛化疗失败后的局部晚期或转移性非小细胞肺癌患者的单一疗法。本摘要提供的信息包括化学、生产和控制、临床药理学以及临床试验的疗效和安全性结果。吉非替尼是一种苯胺喹唑啉化合物,化学名称为4-喹唑啉胺,N-(3-氯-4-氟苯基)-7-甲氧基-6-[3-(4-吗啉基)丙氧基]。其分子式为C₂₂H₂₄ClFN₄O₃。吉非替尼常被称为表皮生长因子受体的“特异性”或“选择性”抑制剂。然而,研究表明,吉非替尼在抑制表皮生长因子信号的浓度下,也能抑制其他细胞内跨膜酪氨酸特异性蛋白激酶的活性。临床相关剂量产生的最大血浆浓度为0.5 - 1微摩尔或更高,远在几种酪氨酸激酶的IC₅₀值范围内。尚未进行临床研究证明表皮生长因子受体表达与吉非替尼反应之间的相关性。吉非替尼口服后生物利用度为60%,在体内广泛分布。吉非替尼在肝脏中通过细胞色素P450 3A4酶广泛代谢。在10天内,口服放射性剂量的约86%在粪便中回收,尿液中回收剂量小于剂量的4%。每日口服给药后,10天达到稳态血浆水平,比单剂量给药后高2倍。在一项随机、双盲、II期、多中心试验中,比较了两种口服剂量的吉非替尼(250毫克/天与500毫克/天),证明了吉非替尼的有效性。共招募了216名患者。142名对铂类和多西他赛难治或不耐受的患者组成了疗效分析的可评估人群。接受250毫克/天吉非替尼的患者中部分肿瘤缓解率为14%(66例中的9例),接受500毫克/天吉非替尼的患者中为8%(76例中的6例)。两种剂量联合的总体客观缓解率(RR)为10.6%(142例患者中的15例;95%置信区间,6.0 - 16.8%)。女性和非吸烟者的缓解更常见。缓解的中位持续时间为7.0个月(范围,4.6 - 18.6 +个月)。其他提交的数据包括在未经化疗的III期和IV期非小细胞肺癌患者中进行的两项大型试验的结果。患者被随机分配接受吉非替尼(每日250或500毫克)或安慰剂,联合吉西他滨加顺铂(n = 1093)或卡铂加紫杉醇(n = 1037)。该研究结果显示,化疗中添加吉非替尼无益处(RR、进展时间或生存率)。因此,吉非替尼仅推荐作为单一疗法使用。与吉非替尼治疗相关的常见不良事件包括腹泻、皮疹、痤疮、皮肤干燥、恶心和呕吐。接受吉非替尼的患者中观察到间质性肺病。在全球范围内,间质性肺病的发生率约为1%(日本上市后经验中为2%,美国扩大使用计划中约为0.3%)。约三分之一的病例是致命的。吉非替尼是根据替代终点RR在加速批准法规下获批的。迄今为止,尚无对照的吉非替尼试验证明其具有临床益处,如改善疾病相关症状或提高生存率。加速批准法规要求申办者进行额外研究以验证吉非替尼治疗能产生此类益处。