EML4-ALK positive lung cancer is a primary malignantlung tumor whose cells contain a characteristic abnormal configuration of DNA wherein the echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 4gene is fused to the anaplastic lymphoma kinase gene. This abnormal gene fusion leads to the production of a protein that appears, in many cases, to promote and maintain the malignant behavior of the cancer cells. The transforming EML4-ALKfusion gene was first reported in non-small cell lung carcinoma in 2007.
is a targeted therapy, manufactured by Pfizer and marketed under the brand name Xalkori and Crizalk that targets the EML4/ALK fusion gene. Ceritinib is a second generation targeted therapy, manufactured by Novartis and sold under the brand name Zykadia that also targets the EML4 fusion gene, but as a second generation drug it has a smaller molecule that allows superior penetration of the Blood Brain Barrier over Crizotinib and is more capable of protecting the Central Nervous System. Alectinib another second generation targeted therapy and was approved by Japan in 2014 and by US FDA in 2015., manufactured by Genentech and marketed under the brand name Alecensa. Brigatinib a second generation targeted therapy, manufactured by Takeda and is marketed under the brand name Alunbrig. Ensartinib is a second generation targeted therapy, manufactured by XCovery. Lorlatinib is a third generation targeted therapy, manufactured by Pfizer. TPX-0005 is a new third generation targeted therapy drug trial.
Prognosis
Treatment with crizotinib achieves 60% response rate. However, crizotinib showed no improvement on overall survival compared to chemotherapy. This may be due to the fact that there was a 70% crossover rate to crizotinib in patients treated initially with chemotherapy. Also, patients who tested negative for EML4/ALK fusion had a response rate to crizotinib of up to 35%.
Epidemiology
EML4-ALK gene fusions occur almost exclusively in carcinomas arising in non-smokers. About 4% of non-small-cell lung carcinomas involve an EML4-ALK tyrosine kinase fusion gene. 4-6% of lung adenocarcinomas involve the fusion gene. EML4-ALK mutation rarely occurs in combination with K-RAS or EGFR mutations.