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Use of erlotinib and thalidomide in advanced NSCLC patients with acquired resistance to erlotinib: A pilot study.

Evidences suggested that combined blockade of the VEGF and EGFR pathways can improve the treatment efficacy of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). In our previously clinical practice, we observed that thalidomide, a potent VEGF inhibitor, can significantly decrease the tumor size of one EGFR-TKI resistance patient with lung cancer cachexia. In this pilot study, we tried to assess the efficacy and toxicity of the combination therapy of erlotinib and thalidomide in advanced NSCLC patients with acquired resistance to erlotinib. In all, 52 NSCLC patients with drug resistance to erlotinib were recruited and treated with this combination therapy. After treatment, 4 patients presented with partial remission (PR), 16 with stable disease (SD) and 32 with progressive disease (PD). The objective response rate (ORR) and disease control rate (DCR) was 7.7% and 38.5%, respectively. In this study, we firstly confirmed that thalidomide can reversion of erlotinib-acquired resistance with a 7 weeks median progression-free survival (PFS); besides, this combination therapy shows acceptable drug tolerance; the most common drug related adverse events were astriction, numbness and sleeve-like feeling in the limbs, no thrombosis occurred in any patient. Those evidences indicate that thalidomide may be a useful candidate for reversion of erlotinib-acquired resistance.

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