Overview of Gastric Cancer Treatment
Gastric and gastroesophageal junction (GEJ) adenocarcinomas remain challenging malignancies with poor prognosis in advanced stages. Treatment has evolved significantly with molecular subtyping based on HER2, PD-L1, MSI-H/dMMR, and Claudin 18.2 expression guiding targeted therapy and immunotherapy selection. Standard first-line chemotherapy consists of platinum/fluoropyrimidine doublets, with addition of trastuzumab for HER2-positive disease and checkpoint inhibitors for PD-L1 CPS β₯1 or MSI-H tumors showing significant survival improvements.
Treatment Approach by Molecular Subtype
HER2-Positive (15% of cases)
- First-line: Trastuzumab + platinum/fluoropyrimidine (FOLFOX or XELOX)
- Second-line: Trastuzumab deruxtecan (T-DXd) - breakthrough therapy
- Later lines: Tucatinib + trastuzumab
PD-L1 CPS β₯1 or MSI-H/dMMR
- First-line: Nivolumab or pembrolizumab + chemotherapy
- MSI-H: Pembrolizumab monotherapy is highly effective
- Later lines: Nivolumab monotherapy
Claudin 18.2 Positive (30-40% of cases)
- First-line: Zolbetuximab + chemotherapy (recently approved)
- Must have β₯75% tumor cells with moderate-to-strong staining
Unselected Population
- First-line: Platinum/fluoropyrimidine doublet Β± ramucirumab
- Second-line: Ramucirumab + paclitaxel or FOLFIRI
- Later lines: Regorafenib, trifluridine/tipiracil
Epidemiology & Impact
Gastric cancer is the fifth most common cancer worldwide with approximately 1.1 million new cases annually, though rates are much lower in the United States (approximately 30,300 cases in 2025). Incidence varies dramatically by geography, with rates in East Asia 5-6 times higher than in North America, reflecting H. pylori prevalence and dietary factors. In the US, incidence has been rising 0.8% per year, with notable increases in non-cardia gastric cancer among younger adults. Key risk factors include H. pylori infection, smoking, high-salt diets, family history, and hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (CDH1 mutations). Overall 5-year survival is approximately 36%.
Molecular Biology & Biomarkers
Gastric adenocarcinoma has four TCGA molecular subtypes: EBV-positive (approximately 9%, high PD-L1), microsatellite unstable (22%, immunotherapy responsive), genomically stable (20%, CDH1/RHOA mutations), and chromosomally unstable (50%, receptor tyrosine kinase amplifications). HER2 overexpression (15-20%) guides trastuzumab therapy. PD-L1 CPS identifies immunotherapy candidates. Claudin 18.2, expressed in approximately 38% of cases, is targeted by zolbetuximab. Comprehensive biomarker testing (HER2, PD-L1, MSI, Claudin 18.2) is now recommended at diagnosis.
Evolving Treatment Landscape
CheckMate 649 established nivolumab plus chemotherapy as preferred first-line treatment, with survival improvement particularly in PD-L1 CPS 5 or higher tumors. For HER2-positive tumors, trastuzumab plus chemotherapy is standard, with trastuzumab deruxtecan showing remarkable activity including in lower HER2 expression. Zolbetuximab targeting Claudin 18.2 improved survival in the SPOTLIGHT and GLOW trials. Perioperative FLOT is standard for resectable disease.
Approved Gastric Cancer Therapies
Maintenance: 6 mg/kg IV every 3 weeks over 30-90 minutes
Continue until disease progression
Monotherapy: 240 mg IV every 2 weeks or 480 mg IV every 4 weeks
Continue until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity
With Paclitaxel: Ramucirumab 8 mg/kg IV on days 1 and 15 + paclitaxel 80 mg/mΒ² IV on days 1, 8, 15 of 28-day cycle