FDA Approval Summary: Selpercatinib for the Treatment of Lung and Thyroid Cancers with RET Gene Mutations or Fusions

On May 8, 2020, the FDA granted accelerated approval to selpercatinib for (i) adult patients with metastatic RET fusion–positive non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), (ii) adult and pediatric patients ≥12 years of age with advanced or metastatic RET-mutant medullary thyroid cancer who require systemic therapy, and (iii) adult and pediatric patients ≥12 years of age with advanced or metastatic RET fusion–positive thyroid cancer who require systemic therapy and who are radioactive iodine refractory (if radioactive iodine is appropriate). Approval was granted on the basis of the clinically important effects on the overall response rate (ORR) with prolonged duration of responses observed in a multicenter, open-label, multicohort clinical trial (LIBRETTO-001, NCT03157128) in patients whose tumors had RET alterations. ORRs within the approved patient populations ranged from 64% [95% confidence interval (CI), 54–73] in prior platinum-treated RET fusion–positive NSCLC to 100% (95% CI, 63–100) in systemic therapy–naïve RET fusion–positive thyroid cancer, with the majority of responders across indications demonstrating responses of at least 6 months. The product label includes warnings and precautions for hepatotoxicity, hypertension, QT interval prolongation, hemorrhagic events, hypersensitivity, risk of impaired wound healing, and embryo-fetal toxicity. This is the first approval of a drug specifically for patients with RET alterations globally.

[1]  A. Drilon,et al.  Efficacy of Selpercatinib in RET-Altered Thyroid Cancers. , 2020, The New England journal of medicine.

[2]  M. Santoro,et al.  RET Gene Fusions in Malignancies of the Thyroid and Other Tissues , 2020, Genes.

[3]  V. Subbiah,et al.  Advances in Targeting RET-Dependent Cancers. , 2020, Cancer discovery.

[4]  S. Asa,et al.  Diagnosis and pathologic characteristics of medullary thyroid carcinoma-review of current guidelines. , 2019, Current oncology.

[5]  B. Tuch,et al.  Emergence and Targeting of Acquired and Hereditary Resistance to Multikinase RET Inhibition in Patients With RET-Altered Cancer , 2019, JCO precision oncology.

[6]  R. Ciampi,et al.  Twenty-Five Years Experience on RET Genetic Screening on Hereditary MTC: An Update on The Prevalence of Germline RET Mutations , 2019, Genes.

[7]  A. Drilon,et al.  Targeting RET-driven cancers: lessons from evolving preclinical and clinical landscapes , 2018, Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology.

[8]  P. Keegan,et al.  First FDA Approval Agnostic of Cancer Site - When a Biomarker Defines the Indication. , 2017, The New England journal of medicine.

[9]  V. Rusch,et al.  Lung cancer — major changes in the American Joint Committee on Cancer eighth edition cancer staging manual , 2017, CA: a cancer journal for clinicians.

[10]  M. Schlumberger,et al.  Correlative analyses of RET and RAS mutations in a phase 3 trial of cabozantinib in patients with progressive, metastatic medullary thyroid cancer , 2016, Cancer.

[11]  R. Pazdur,et al.  Benefit-Risk Summary of Crizotinib for the Treatment of Patients With ROS1 Alteration-Positive, Metastatic Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer , 2016, The oncologist.

[12]  R. Ciampi,et al.  A comprehensive overview of the role of the RET proto-oncogene in thyroid carcinoma , 2016, Nature Reviews Endocrinology.

[13]  E. Baudin,et al.  Vandetanib in patients with locally advanced or metastatic medullary thyroid cancer: a randomized, double-blind phase III trial. , 2012, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[14]  J. Brierley,et al.  An evidence-based review of poorly differentiated thyroid cancer , 2007, World Journal of Surgery.

[15]  L. Grimelius,et al.  Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma: three protocols combining doxorubicin, hyperfractionated radiotherapy and surgery , 2002, British Journal of Cancer.

[16]  R. Tsang,et al.  The effects of surgery, radioiodine, and external radiation therapy on the clinical outcome of patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma , 1998, Cancer.

[17]  M. Ranney,et al.  Beyond the bedside: Clinicians as guardians of public health, medicine and science , 2020, The American Journal of Emergency Medicine.

[18]  F. Raue,et al.  Epidemiology and Clinical Presentation of Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma. , 2015 .

[19]  Y. Nikiforov,et al.  American Thyroid Association guidelines for management of patients with anaplastic thyroid cancer. , 2012, Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association.

[20]  J. Samet,et al.  Food and Drug Administration , 2007, BMJ : British Medical Journal.