Background: Selpercatinib is a selective RET inhibitor approved for treatment of RET-activated cancers. Adverse events (AEs) are manageable with dose modifications. This post hoc analysis characterized selpercatinib's clinical safety profile after long-term follow-up in the safety population of LIBRETTO-001.
Patients and methods: LIBRETTO-001 is an ongoing phase I/II, single-arm, open-label trial (NCT03157128). Eligible patients were ≥18 years old with diagnosis of advanced/metastatic RET fusion-positive solid tumor, RET-mutant medullary thyroid cancer, or other RET-activated tumors. In phase I, patients received selpercatinib 20 mg QD or 20-240 mg BID; patients in phase II received 160 mg BID. The analyzed population comprised all patients who received ≥1 selpercatinib dose and were followed up until data cutoff (January 13, 2023).
Results: For the 837 patients, median follow-up was 45.4 months (95% CI, 44.5-46.6); median time on treatment was 30.1 months (range 0.1-66.8). Grade ≥3 treatment-emergent AEs (TEAEs) were reported in 76.2% of patients; most common events were hypertension (19.7%), ALT increased (11.8%), and hyponatremia (9.2%). Serious TEAEs were reported in 51.4% of patients. Most frequently reported any-grade AEs at <6 months of treatment were fatigue (36.6%), dry mouth (32.8%), and ALT increased (30.5%); at ≥24 months of treatment, these were edema (63.2%), diarrhea (60.7%), and fatigue (53.0%). Selpercatinib-related TEAEs leading to reduced dosage were reported in 39.3%, those leading to treatment interruption were reported in 47.1%, and those leading to discontinuation were reported in 4.3% of patients.
Conclusion: Long-term treatment with selpercatinib is feasible. AEs are manageable with dose modifications, allowing most patients to continue safely on therapy.
Keywords: RET inhibitor; medullary thyroid cancer; non-small cell lung cancer; selpercatinib; toxicity.
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press.