| Literature DB >> 27536062 |
Giulia Zago1, Mirte Muller2, Michel van den Heuvel2, Paul Baas2.
Abstract
Non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is often diagnosed at an advanced stage of disease, where it is no longer amenable to curative treatment. During the last decades, the survival has only improved significantly for lung cancer patients who have tumors harboring a driver mutation. Therefore, there is a clear unmet need for effective therapies for patients with no mutation. Immunotherapy has emerged as an effective treatment for different cancer types. Nivolumab, a monoclonal inhibitory antibody against PD-1 receptor, can prolong survival of NSCLC patients, with a manageable toxicity profile. In two Phase III trials, nivolumab was compared to docetaxel in patients with, respectively, squamous (CheckMate 017) and non-squamous NSCLC (CheckMate 057). In both trials, nivolumab significantly reduced the risk of death compared to docetaxel (41% and 27% lower risk of death for squamous and non-squamous NSCLC, respectively). Therefore, nivolumab has been approved in the US and in Europe as second-line treatment for advanced NSCLC. Unfortunately, accurate predictive factors for patient selection are lacking, making it difficult to decide who will benefit and who will not. Currently, there are many ongoing trials that evaluate the efficacy of nivolumab in different settings and in combination with other agents. This paper reviews the present literature about the role of nivolumab in the treatment of NSCLC. Particular attention has been given to efficacy studies, toxicity profile, and current and emerging predictive factors.Entities:
Keywords: advanced non-small-cell lung cancer; anti-PD-1; immunotherapy; nivolumab
Year: 2016 PMID: 27536062 PMCID: PMC4975160 DOI: 10.2147/BTT.S87878
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biologics ISSN: 1177-5475
Figure 1Multistep process for the diagnosis and characterization of lung cancer.
Notes: (A) The two main lung cancer subtypes, SCLC and NSCLC, can be discriminated by a morphological analysis. NSCLC accounts for ~85%–90% of all lung cancers. (B) Immunohistochemistry allows different NSCLC subtypes to be distinguished. (C) Molecular testing allows possible driver mutations in the tumor to be identified (EGFR and ALK). Analysis of ROS1, BRAF, and MET should be considered for selected patients. Data from National Cancer Institute73 and Naidoo et al.5
Abbreviations: SCLC, small-cell lung cancer; NSCLC, non-small-cell lung cancer; NOS, non-squamous.
Driver mutations, and current and emerging targeted treatments in NSCLC
| Molecular alteration | Frequency | Targeted agent | Studies and findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| EGFR mutation (exon 19–21) | Caucasian pts: 10%–15% NSCLCs | Gefitinib | IPASS (Mok et al |
| Asian pts: 50% NSCLCs | Erlotinib | EURTAC (Rosell et al | |
| Common mutation: exon 19 deletion: 45%; exon 21 L858R: 40% | Afatinib | LUX-Lung 3 (Sequist et al | |
| EGFR mutation (exon 20 T790M) | Acquired resistance to first-line EGFR | AZD9291 | AZD9291 Phase I (Jänne et al |
| TKI: 50% pts | CO-1686 (rociletinib) | CO-1686 Phase I/II (Sequist et al | |
| ALK translocation | 2%–7% NSCLCs | Crizotinib | PROFILE 1007 (Shaw et al |
| Ceritinib | ASCEND-1 Phase I (Shaw et al | ||
| Alectinib | AF-001JP Phase I/II (Seto et al | ||
| ROS1 rearrangement | 1%–2% NSCLCs | Crizotinib | Phase I (Shaw et al |
| MET amplification | <1% ADC | Crizotinib | Ongoing Phase I trial NCT00585195 (PROFILE 1001) (Camidge et al |
| BRAF V600E mutation | <2% NSCLCs | Dabrafenib | Ongoing Phase II trial NCT01336634 (Planchard et al |
| Dabrafenib + trametinib (MEK-inhibitor) | Ongoing Phase II trial NCT01336634 (Planchard et al | ||
| HER2 mutation | 3% ADC (2% NSCLCs) | Trastuzumab or afatinib | Retrospective (Mazieres et al |
| RET rearrangement | 1%–2% ADC | Cabozantinib | Ongoing Phase II trial NCT01639508 (Drilon et al |
Note: EGFR+ represents EGFR mutation positive (ie, activating mutations).
Abbreviations: NSCLC, non-small-cell lung cancer; pts, patients; RR, response rate; PFS, progression-free survival; ADC, adenocarcinoma; ChT, chemotherapy; Cis, cisplatin; Pem, pemetrexed; OS, overall survival; TKI, tyrosine kinase inhibitor; DCR, disease control rate; N/R, not reported; ORR, overall response rate; PR, partial response; CI, confidence interval; AEs, adverse events.
Figure 2Immuno-modulatory role of PD-1 receptor and mechanism of action of nivolumab.
Abbreviations: MHC, major histocompatibility complex; TCR, T-Cell Receptor; PD-1, programmed death 1; PD-L1, programmed death 1 – ligand 1; PD-L2, programmed death 1 – ligand 2.
Figure 3Nivolumab development, from preclinical experience to clinical approval: focus on NSCLC.
Notes: Timeline of nivolumab development from the preclinical studies to US FDA approval (dotted lines represent the starting date of the related trial).
Abbreviations: PD-1, programmed death 1; PD-L1, programmed death 1 – ligand 1; NSCLC, non-small-cell lung cancer; CRC, colorectal cancer; RCC, renal cell carcinoma; Nivo, nivolumab; Ipi, ipilimumab; FDA, US Food and Drug Administration; SqNSCLC, squamous NSCLC.
Main trials evaluating nivolumab in NSCLC patients, from Phase I to Phase III trials, and preliminary results of ongoing trials.
| Trial | Phase and line | Treatment | Patients | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Gettinger et al | Phase I Pretreated NSCLC | Nivolumab, q2w: | 129 pts | ORR: 17%. ORR by dose: 3% (Nivo 1 mg/kg), 24% (Nivo 3 mg/kg), and 20% (Nivo 10 mg/kg) |
| CheckMate 063 (Rizvi et al | Phase II third line SqNSCLC | Nivolumab | 117 pts | Response: PR =14.5% (95% CI 8.7 to 22.2); SD =26% (95% Cl, 18 to 35) |
| CheckMate 017 (Brahmer et al | Phase III second line SqNSCLC | Nivolumab vs docetaxel | 135 pts vs 137 pts | ORR: nivolumab 20% (95% Cl, 14 to 28) vs Docetaxel 9% (95% Cl, 5 to 15) ( |
| CheckMate 057 (Borghaei et al | Phase III second line Non-SqNSCLC | Nivolumab vs docetaxel | 287 pts vs 268 pts | ORR: nivolumab 19% (95% Cl, 15 to 24) vs Docetaxel 12% (95% Cl, 9 to 17) ( |
| CheckMate 012 (Gettinger et al | Phase I first line NSCLC | Nivolumab | 52 pts | Ongoing. Clin Trial Gov: NCT01454102 (CheckMate 012) |
| CheckMate 012 (Rizvi et al | Phase I first line NSCLC | Nivolumab + ipilimumab (multiple doses) | 148 pts (4 cohorts) | Ongoing. Clin Trial Gov: NCT01454102 (CheckMate 012) |
| Carbone et al | Phase III first line PD-L1+NSCLC | Nivolumab + vs ICC | Estimated total: 535 pts | Ongoing. Clin Trial Gov: NCT02041533 (CheckMate 026) |
| CheckMate 227 | Phase III first line or recurrent NSCLC | Nivolumab vs Nivo+ipi vs Nivo+ChT vs ChT | Estimated total: 1980 pts | Ongoing. Clin Trial Gov: NCT02477826 (CheckMate 227) |
Notes: Docetaxel dose in Phase III trials was 75 mg/m2; if not otherwise specified, nivolumab dose should be intended as 3 mg/kg, q2w.
Abbreviations: NSCLC, non-small-cell lung cancer; CRC, colorectal cancer; RCC, renal cell carcinoma; Ipi, ipilimumab; SqNSCLC, squamous NSCLC; ORR, overall response rate; SD, stable disease; CI, confidence interval; OS, overall survival; PR, partial response; N/R, not reported; HR, hazard ratio; PFS, progression-free survival; ICC, investigator’s choice chemotherapy; ChT, chemotherapy; q2w, biweekly; Cis, cisplatin; Gem, gemcitabine; Pem, pemetrexed; Carbo, carboplatin; m, months; pts, patients.
Correlation between PD-L1 expression and clinical response to nivolumab in NSCLC
| Study | Evaluable specimens (pts, n) | PD-L1 cut-off (% pos tumor cells) | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Topalian et al, | 61 specimens, 42 pts (18 melanoma, 10 NSCLC, 7 CRC, 5 RCC, 2 prostate cancer) | ≥5% | 25 pos/42 pts → OR: 9 pts (36%) |
| Data suggestive for a relationship between PD-L1 expression and OR | |||
| Gettinger et al, | 68 pts | ≥5% | 33 pos/68 pts → ORR: 15%; median OS: 7.8 months (95% CI, 5.6 to 21.7 months) |
| No association between PD-L1 status and ORR or OS | |||
| Rizvi et al, | 76 pts | ≥1% | PD-L1 pos (≥1%) → ORR: 20% |
| ≥5% | PD-L1 pos (≥5%) → ORR: 24% | ||
| ≥10% | PD-L1 pos (≥10%) → ORR: 24% | ||
| OR numerically higher in PD-L1-pos NSCLCs; no differences among different levels of PD-L1 expression | |||
| Brahmer et al, | 225 pts (117 received nivolumab) | ≥1% | PD-L1 pos (≥1%) → ORR: 17% |
| ≥5% | PD-L1 pos (≥5%) → ORR: 21% | ||
| ≥10% | PD-L1 pos (≥10%) → ORR: 19% | ||
| PD-L1 expression has no predictive or prognostic value; nivolumab is more effective than docetaxel despite PD-L1 level | |||
| Borghaei et al, | 455 pts (231 received nivolumab) | ≥1% | PD-L1 pos (≥1%) → ORR: 31% |
| ≥5% | PD-L1 pos (≥5%) → ORR: 36% | ||
| ≥10% | PD-L1 pos (≥10%) → ORR: 37% | ||
| Strong predictive association between PD-L1 expression and outcome (ORR, PFS, OS) at all expression levels | |||
| Rizvi et al, | 113 pts (nivolumab + ipilimumab) | ≥1% | PD-L1 pos (≥1%) → ORR: 8%–48% (across different dose regimens |
| Clinical activity was observed regardless of tumor PD-L1 expression; preliminary evidence of greater activity in ≥1% PD-L1-pos tumors |
Note:
Dose regimens included: nivolumab 1 mg/kg + ipilimumab 1 mg/kg, q3w; nivolumab 1 mg/kg, q2w + ipilimumab 1 mg/kg, q6w; nivolumab 3 mg/kg, q2w + ipilimumab 1 mg/kg, q12w; nivolumab 3 mg/kg, q2w + ipilimumab 1 mg/kg, q6w.
Abbreviations: NSCLC, non-small-cell lung cancer; pts, patients; pos, positive; CRC, colorectal cancer; RCC, renal cell carcinoma; OR, objective response; neg, negative; FU, follow-up; ORR, overall response rate; PD-L1, programmed death 1 – ligand 1; PFS, progression-free survival; OS, overall survival.
Most common nivolumab-related immune-mediated adverse events and reported frequency in the main clinical trials
| Study | Pts (n) | Pneumonitis | Diarrhea | Hypothyroidism | Skin toxicity | Renal toxicity | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||||
| Any grade | Grade 3–4 | Any grade | Grade 3–4 | Any grade | Grade 3–4 | Any grade | Grade 3–4 | Any grade | Grade 3–4 | ||
| Gettinger et al, | 129 NSCLC | 8 (6%) | 3 (2%) | 13 (10%) | 1 (1%) | N/R | N/R | Rash: 9 (7%) | None | N/R | N/R |
| Rizvi et al, | 117 NSCLC | 6 (5%) | 4 (3%) | 12 (10%) | 3 (3%) | 3 (3%) | None | Rash: 13 (11%) | 1 (1%) | 4 (3%) | None |
| Brahmer et al, | 131 NSCLC nivolumab | 6 (5%) | 1 (1%) | 10 (8%) | None | 5 (4%) | None | Rash: 5 (4%) | None | Creatinine increase 4 (3%) Nephritis 1 (1%) | None 1 (1%) |
| Borghaei et al, | 287 NSCLC nivolumab | 8 (3%) | 3 (1%) | 22 (8%) | 2 (1%) | 19 (7%) | None | Rash: 27 (9%) | 1 (<1%) | Creatinine increase 5 (2%) Renal failure 1 (1%) | None None |
Note: Data are presented as n (%).
Abbreviations: pts, patients; FU, follow-up; NSCLC, non-small-cell lung cancer; N/R, not reported.
Management of the most common irAEs
| irAE | Grade 1 | Grade 2 | Grade 3–4 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pneumonitis | Consider discontinue treatment | Discontinue treatment | Discontinue treatment X-ray every 3 days |
| If no improvement: | X-ray every 3 days | Consider bronchoscopy/biopsy | |
| Diarrhea | Continue treatment | Discontinue treatment | Discontinue treatment |
| Consider colonoscopy | Colonoscopy | ||
| Hypothyroidism | Continue treatment | Continue treatment | MRI hypophyses |
| Skin toxicity | Continue treatment | Continue treatment | Discontinue treatment |
| If no improvement (in 2 weeks): | If no improvement (in 2 weeks): | Start prednisone 1–2 mg/kg/d, until resolved to grade 1 | |
| Renal toxicity | Continue treatment | Discontinue treatment | Discontinue treatment |
Note: Toxicity grading: as defined by CTCAE.
Abbreviations: irAEs, immune-related adverse events; IV, intravenous; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; CTCAE, Common terminology criteria for adverse events.