| Literature DB >> 27638681 |
Nicholas D Klemen1, Paul L Feingold1, Stephanie L Goff1, Marybeth S Hughes1, Udai S Kammula1, James C Yang1, David S Schrump1, Steven A Rosenberg1, Richard M Sherry2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immunotherapeutic treatment strategies including adoptive cell transfer (ACT) for metastatic melanoma are capable of mediating complete and durable responses, as well as partial responses and prolonged disease stabilization. Unfortunately, many patients ultimately develop progressive disease. The role of salvage metastasectomy in managing these patients has not been evaluated.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27638681 PMCID: PMC5179591 DOI: 10.1245/s10434-016-5537-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Surg Oncol ISSN: 1068-9265 Impact factor: 5.344
Fig. 1Patient selection process for metastasectomy after ACT. CR complete response, PR partial response, SD6 stable disease documented for at least 6 months, PD progressive disease
Demographics of the study cohort before ACT. ACT adoptive cell transfer
| Demographics before ACT | |
|---|---|
| Men, women | 17, 9 |
| Median age of ACT | 49 |
| M stage at the time of ACT | M1a = 4 |
| M1b = 3 | |
| M1c = 19 | |
| Number of metastases at the time of ACT | Median = 5 |
| Average = 6 | |
| Previous therapies | Interferon = 12 |
| Vaccination = 2 | |
| Chemotherapy = 4 | |
| Interleukin-2 = 15 | |
| Ipilimumab = 2 | |
| ACT = 3 | |
Characteristics of the study cohort
|
|
M stage and metastases correspond to the stage and number of metastatic lesions known before ACT. ‘Response’ indicates the response to ACT (using RECIST); ‘Interval’ indicates the time (in months) between ACT and metastasectomy; blue shading indicates patients with ongoing PFS and OS after metastasectomy; green shading indicates patients with ongoing OS after progressive disease; and red shading indicates patients who expired with disease
ACT adoptive cell transfer, RECIST Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors, PFS progression-free tumor, OS overall survival, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, PR partial response, SD stable disease, CR complete response, LN lymph node, NED no evidence of disease, N/A not applicable, WBRT whole brain radiotherapy
aIndicates elevated serum LDH at the time of metastasectomy
bIndicates incomplete resection of intended progressing lesions
cIndicates ongoing PFS or OS
Fig. 2Kaplan–Meier curves showing progression-free survival and overall survival (OS) after metastasectomy (n = 26)
Clinical factors analyzed for association with PFS and OS after metastasectomy
| Univariate | Number of patients | Median PFS (Months) | Median OS (Months) | Five-year OS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interval between ACT, surgery |
|
| ||
| <1 year | 12 | 5 | NR | 60 % |
| >1 year | 14 | 23 | 51 | 49 % |
| Number of tumors resected |
|
| ||
| One | 18 | 23 | NR | 56 % |
| Two | 8 | 3.5 | 44 | 47 % |
| Location of tumors |
|
| ||
| Nodal/subcutaneous | 9 | 4 | NR | 53 % |
| Visceral (or elevated LHD) | 17 | 40 | NR | 61 % |
| Post-op disease status |
|
| ||
| No evidence of disease | 18 | 14 | NR | 62 % |
| Residual disease | 8 | 7.5 | 27 | 45 % |
| Type of metastasis |
|
| ||
| Pre-existing site | 19 | 46 | NR | 73 % |
| New site | 7 | 3 | 20 | 0 % |
PFS progression-free survival, OS overall survival, ACT adoptive cell transfer, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, NR not reported
Fig. 3Kaplan–Meier curves showing progression-free survival and overall survival of patients after resection of a pre-existing tumor (n = 19; blue line) or a new tumor (n = 7; yellow line). Univariate analysis was performed using the log-rank test