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Metastatic non-small cell lung cancer is often treated with a combination of chemotherapy and immunotherapy. In patients over the age of 70, some are already in poor health and frail, requiring assistance with daily activities, for example. Older and/or frail individuals often do not tolerate standard-dose chemotherapy well, and their risk of side effects is higher than that of younger patients.
For this reason, the SAKK 18/24 study is investigating how effective and safe chemotherapy is in patients over 70 years of age when the chemotherapy drugs are administered at lower doses than usual. The aim of the study is to find a potentially effective and well-tolerated treatment for older people with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer.
Full description
This randomized, open-label, phase II clinical trial evaluates the efficacy, safety, and overall treatment utility of reduced-dose platinum-doublet chemotherapy (rdCT) in combination with cemiplimab (cemi) versus cemiplimab monotherapy in older and/or frail patients with stage III/IV non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and PD-L1 expression <50%. The study specifically addresses a major evidence gap for a vulnerable patient population often underrepresented in registrational trials.
Cemiplimab in combination with full-dose carboplatin-based doublet chemotherapy is a Swissmedic-approved first-line treatment for advanced NSCLC, based on data from EMPOWER-Lung 03. However, full-dose chemotherapy regimens (e.g., carboplatin AUC 5 + pemetrexed, paclitaxel, or gemcitabine) are frequently associated with prohibitive toxicity in elderly and/or frail patients. Over half of all newly diagnosed mNSCLC cases occur in individuals aged 70 or older, many of whom present with frailty or multimorbidity. While atezolizumab monotherapy has shown a survival benefit over single-agent chemotherapy in older, treatment-ineligible patients (IPSOS trial), overall outcomes remain suboptimal.
In clinical practice, rdCT regimens are commonly used in this patient population, despite limited prospective evidence. The present study uses the G8 screening tool-a validated geriatric assessment instrument-to identify patients at risk for increased treatment toxicity and to support treatment adaptation.
Objectives The primary objective is to compare overall survival (OS) between rdCT + cemiplimab and cemiplimab monotherapy. Secondary objectives include comparison of progression-free survival (PFS), objective response rate (ORR), adverse events (AE), health-related quality of life (HRQoL), and overall treatment utility (OTU).
Design and Interventions This is a multicenter, randomized, open-label, parallel-group study enrolling approximately 156 patients (78 per arm) across ~17 sites in Switzerland. Eligible patients are ≥70 years old, have a G8 score ≤14 or are deemed unsuitable for full-dose chemotherapy, and have advanced or metastatic NSCLC without actionable genomic alterations and PD-L1 <50%.
Patients are randomized to one of two arms:
Cemiplimab maintenance continues until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or a maximum of 2 years. Treatment beyond progression is permitted in cases of oligoprogression amenable to local therapy.
Assessments Radiologic response assessments (CT ± CNS imaging) are performed every 6 weeks until week 12, then every 9 weeks until week 30, and every 12 weeks thereafter. HRQoL is assessed using NFLSI-17 and QLQ-ELD14 at baseline, every 6 weeks to week 12, every 9 weeks to week 30, and every 24 weeks thereafter.
Overall Treatment Utility (OTU) is assessed at the same intervals and incorporates:
Statistical Considerations With 128 OS events, the study is powered (80%) to detect an increase in median OS from 10.3 months (based on IPSOS trial) to 16 months in the experimental arm (one-sided alpha = 0.05). Sample size: 156 patients (allowing 5% attrition).
Time-to-event outcomes will be analyzed using Kaplan-Meier methods with log-rank tests and Cox proportional hazards models. Response rates and adverse events will be compared using Fisher's exact or chi-square tests. Continuous variables (e.g., HRQoL scores) will be analyzed using Wilcoxon rank-sum or linear regression (mixed models as appropriate).
Quality Assurance and Data Integrity
Although not formally a registry, the trial employs registry-like quality control elements:
Conclusion This trial responds to the pressing need for evidence-based, tolerable, and effective treatment strategies for older and/or frail patients with advanced NSCLC. By leveraging geriatric screening tools and integrating real-world adaptations such as reduced-dose chemotherapy, this study aims to optimize oncologic outcomes while preserving quality of life and functional status. Findings will inform clinical decision-making for a frequently excluded patient group in oncology research.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Informed Consent as documented by signature
Histologically or cytologically confirmed NSCLC. Mixed histology with small-cell component is not allowed.
Metastatic or advanced or recurrent NSCLC without a curative-intent treatment option (surgery or chemo-radiotherapy).
PD-L1 <50% by local testing (SP 142 excluded)
≥70 years
ECOG 0-2
G8 screening score of ≤14 and/or ineligible for full-dose chemotherapy, defined as doses of carboplatin AUC 5, pemetrexed 500 mg/m2, paclitaxel 175 mg/m2, gemcitabine 1200 mg/m2 (as per Investigator)
Life expectancy ≥6 months
Patients with a prior malignancy (except NSCLC, see EC 7.2.2 and 7.2.3) and treated with curative intent are eligible if all treatment of that malignancy was completed at least 2 years before registration and the patient has no evidence of disease at registration. Less than 2 years is acceptable for malignancies with low risk of recurrence and/or no late recurrence, after consultation with CI.
Patients with asymptomatic untreated or symptomatic treated CNS metastases are eligible if corticosteroid dose <10 mg prednisolone equivalent/day for at least 7 days
Patients must be suitable to receive reduced-dose carboplatin-doublet chemotherapy in combination with immunotherapy including adequate bone marrow, renal and hepatic function as follows:
Men agree not to donate sperm or father a child during trial treatment and until 6 months after the last dose of trial treatment
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
156 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Gisela Müller
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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