4.5 Review

Emerging drugs for the treatment of radioactive iodine refractory papillary thyroid cancer

Journal

EXPERT OPINION ON INVESTIGATIONAL DRUGS
Volume 31, Issue 7, Pages 669-679

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13543784.2022.2071696

Keywords

Anti-angiogenic; radioactive iodine refractory DTC; redifferentiation; targeted therapy

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This paper discusses the refractoriness to RAI treatment and the optimization of treatment initiation and choice. Clinical trials show that anti-angiogenic kinase inhibitors and targeted inhibitors have high response rates in improving survival. Treatment sequencing and targeted therapies still pose challenges and further research is needed.
Introduction The most frequent radioactive (RAI) refractory thyroid cancers are papillary thyroid carcinoma, followed by poorly differentiated thyroid carcinoma. They are rare and lethal. In recent years, significant therapeutic progress has been achieved. Areas covered This paper offers insights on refractoriness to RAI treatment and the optimization of treatment initiation and treatment choice. Clinical trials performed with anti-angiogenic kinase inhibitors and with targeted inhibitors in patients with BRAF, RAS mutation or RET, TRK or ALK fusion are discussed. Expert opinion These treatments provide high response rates. Anti-angiogenic kinase inhibitors improve median progression-free-survival; however, their benefit in terms of overall survival has been shown in only few subsets of patients. Treatment sequencing is challenging; in the absence of targetable abnormality, lenvatinib should be used as first-line treatment. Options for second-line treatment include lenvatinib (if not given at first line), cabozantinib or the addition of an anti-checkpoint antibody. In patients with a targetable abnormality, specific inhibitors, might be used as first-line treatment and lenvatinib as second line or vice-versa. Further studies are needed, based on documented genomic and immunologic characteristics of the tumor to assess the potential role of combination and redifferentiation therapy.

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