Impact of lorlatinib on patient-reported outcomes in patients with advanced ALK-positive or ROS1-positive non-small cell lung cancer

2020 
Abstract Objectives To evaluate patient-reported outcomes (PROs) from a phase 1/2 study (NCT01970865) in patients with anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)- or ROS1-positive advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated with lorlatinib 100 mg once daily. Materials and Methods PRO measures, including global quality of life (QoL), functioning domains and symptoms, were assessed by the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Quality of Life Questionnaire Core 30 (QLQ-C30) and the 13-item Lung Cancer (QLQ-LC13) module. Mean changes of absolute scores from baseline were assessed. Percentages of patients showing improvement, stability or worsening on each scale were reported, with a change of ≥10 points considered clinically meaningful (CM). Results 255 patients completed baseline and ≥1 post-baseline PRO assessment. Most patients had CM improvement (42.4%) or stable (38.0%) scores for global QoL. Functioning domains with the greatest proportion of patients with improved scores were role (37.6%) and emotional (36.9%); only one domain had more patients showing worsening than improving function (cognitive [24.3% vs 22.4%]). Most patients showed improved or stable scores for disease-related symptoms. No QLQ-C30 symptom domains had more patients worsening than improving. Symptoms on the QLQ-C30 scale with the greatest proportion of patients with improved scores were fatigue (49.4%) and insomnia (46.3%). Four QLQ-LC13 domains had more patients worsening than improving (two most affected were peripheral neuropathy [37.3% vs 13.7%] and alopecia [19.2% vs 13.3%]). Symptoms on the QLQ-LC13 scale with the greatest proportion of patients with improved scores were cough (42.7%) and pain in other parts (32.9%). Conclusions Lorlatinib treatment showed CM improvement from baseline in global QOL that was maintained over time. Additionally, there were improvements in physical, emotional, social, and role functioning improvements were shown in appetite loss and key symptoms such as pain, dyspnea, cough and fatigue; a worsening in peripheral neuropathy was noted.
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