Publications by authors named "Lukas Aguinarte"

Article Synopsis
  • MET amplification in EGFR-mutant non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is a common resistance to EGFR inhibitors, and combining EGFR and MET inhibitors shows promise but has varied definitions of MET amplification.
  • In a study of 43 patients with MET copy number gain, those who received the combination of EGFR and MET inhibitors had an 82% clinical benefit rate and longer progression-free survival compared to those receiving MET inhibitors alone or standard of care.
  • The findings suggest that true MET amplification drives better outcomes with combination therapy, indicating a need for further research into how different types of MET copy number gain affect treatment response.
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Introduction: Programmed death-ligand 1 expression currently represents the only validated predictive biomarker for immune checkpoint inhibition in metastatic NSCLC in the clinical routine, but it has limited value in distinguishing responses. Assessment of KRAS and TP53 mutations (mut) as surrogate for an immunosupportive tumor microenvironment (TME) might help to close this gap.

Methods: A total of 696 consecutive patients with programmed death-ligand 1-high (≥50%), nonsquamous NSCLC, having received molecular testing within the German National Network Genomic Medicine Lung Cancer between 2017 and 2020, with Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status less than or equal to 1 and pembrolizumab as first-line palliative treatment, were included into this retrospective cohort analysis.

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Introduction: Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is a rapidly growing malignancy with early distant metastases. Up to 70% will develop brain metastases, and the poor prognosis of these patients has not changed considerably. The potential of checkpoint inhibitors (CPI) in treating recurrent (r/r) SCLC and their effect on brain metastases remain unclear.

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Background: Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) targeting the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) like the third-generation TKI osimertinib have substantially improved the treatment of patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) harboring sensitizing EGFR mutations. However, there is a subset of patients that do not benefit from these therapies in terms of response rate or progression-free-survival (PFS). It has been shown that persistence of EGFR mutations in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) at weeks 3 and 6 after start of osimertinib predicts shorter PFS.

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