Induction chemotherapy with or without erlotinib in patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma amenable for surgical resection

Clin Cancer Res. 2022 Apr 20:clincanres.3239.2021. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-21-3239. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Purpose: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy prior to definitive surgery has been utilized widely for locally advanced oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). We evaluated neoadjuvant erlotinib with platinum-docetaxel vs. placebo with platinum-docetaxel in stage III-IVB OSCC patients.

Experimental design: Patients with newly diagnosed stage III, IVA, IVB (AJCC 7th) OSCC amenable to surgical resection were included. Patients were randomized to receive up to 3 cycles of chemotherapy with concurrent erlotinib or placebo, followed by surgery. The primary endpoint was major pathologic response (MPR) rate, secondary endpoints included safety, overall (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS).

Results: Fifty-two patients received at least one cycle of treatment and 47 were evaluable with surgical resection. MPR rate was not different between erlotinib (30%, 7/23) and placebo arms (41.7%, 10/24) (p=0.55). At median follow up of 26.5 months, there was no difference on OS or PFS between groups. Patients who received erlotinib with chemotherapy and achieved MPR (n=7) had no recurrence. The treatment-related adverse event rates were not different between the two groups (96% vs. 96%). However, rash, mostly low grade, was more common in the erlotinib arm (79% vs. 50%). Transcriptomic analysis in the pre-treatment samples indicated that genes in protein glycosylation and Wnt signaling pathways were associated with benefit in those treated with erlotinib plus chemotherapy.

Conclusions: The addition of erlotinib to platinum-taxane chemotherapy was well-tolerated but did not induce higher rates of MPR or PFS or OS survival benefit. Patients who received chemotherapy with erlotinib and achieved major pathological responses had excellent clinical outcome.