Real-world treatment and outcomes for EGFR WT advanced/metastatic non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer: pooled analysis from project LUMINATE-101

Methods

The LUMINATE-101 retrospective cohort study evaluated real-world treatment patterns and outcomes for patients with non-squamous epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) wild type (WT) advanced/metastatic NSCLC diagnosed 1 January 2017 to 31 August 2022 that progressed on previous therapies. Patient data were pooled from US-based electronic health records-derived databases: Flatiron Health NSCLC real-world, ConcertAI Patient360 Lung Cancer, and ConcertAI RWD360NLP; redundant records were removed using tokenization.

Results

Overall, 620 patients were included; median age 67 years, >34% ECOG performance status ≥2, 19% had brain metastasis, 10% had liver metastasis, and 91% were current/ex-smokers. Most patients (54%) received a first-line platinum-based regimen ± immunotherapy and second-line docetaxel + ramucirumab/bevacizumab. Real-world outcomes included median overall survival (OS) = 6.4 months, median time to next treatment/death = 5.0 months, median time to treatment discontinuation = 2.3 months, and median progression-free survival = 3.5 months. ECOG performance status ≥2 correlated with poorer real-world outcomes overall; males had poorer survival and greater progression risk.

Conclusions

Real-world median OS of second-line patients on the current standard of care was < 7 months, highlighting an unmet need for more effective therapeutics in non-squamous EGFR WT advanced/metastatic NSCLC.