Long-Term Safety and Management of Adverse Events Associated With Lorlatinib in -Positive Metastatic NSCLC: A Fictional Case Study.
Rearrangements of the anaplastic lymphoma kinase () gene are present in about 3% to 7% of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and are the key drivers of cancer cell proliferation in -posi
APA
Krueger EA, Castronovo E, et al. (2025). Long-Term Safety and Management of Adverse Events Associated With Lorlatinib in -Positive Metastatic NSCLC: A Fictional Case Study.. Journal of the advanced practitioner in oncology, 1-14. https://doi.org/10.6004/jadpro.2025.16.7.32
MLA
Krueger EA, et al.. "Long-Term Safety and Management of Adverse Events Associated With Lorlatinib in -Positive Metastatic NSCLC: A Fictional Case Study.." Journal of the advanced practitioner in oncology, 2025, pp. 1-14.
PMID
41346774
Abstract
Rearrangements of the anaplastic lymphoma kinase () gene are present in about 3% to 7% of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and are the key drivers of cancer cell proliferation in -positive NSCLC. ALK tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) are potent oral inhibitors of the abnormal ALK protein and are standard first-line treatments for patients with -positive metastatic NSCLC (mNSCLC). Lorlatinib is a brain-penetrant, third-generation ALK TKI that was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 2018 for the second- or third-line treatment of patients with -positive mNSCLC and in 2021 for first-line treatment, based on the results of the phase III CROWN study (NCT03052608). The recent 5-year results of the CROWN study showed that median progression-free survival had yet to be reached in the lorlatinib group, corresponding to the longest progression-free survival reported with any single-agent molecular targeted treatment in advanced NSCLC and all metastatic solid tumors (Solomon et al., 2024). These results, along with the extended intracranial efficacy and consistent safety profile of long-term lorlatinib treatment, are unprecedented in patients with -positive mNSCLC. This Grand Rounds article summarizes the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of lorlatinib after 5 years and includes a fictional patient case to demonstrate how advanced practice providers contribute to personalized patient care and the identification and management of adverse events.