| Literature DB >> 29157296 |
David H Aggen1, Charles G Drake2.
Abstract
Treatment options for metastatic urothelial carcinoma (mUC) remained relative unchanged over the last 30 years with combination chemotherapy as the mainstay of treatment. Within the last year the landscape for mUC has seismically shifted following the approval of five therapies targeting the programmed cell death protein (PD-1)/programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1) axis. Notably, the anti-PD-1 antibody pembrolizumab demonstrated improved OS relative to chemotherapy in a randomized phase III study for second line treatment of mUC; this level 1 evidence led to approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The PD-1 antibody nivolumab also demonstrated an overall survival benefit, in this case in comparison to historical controls. Similarly, antibodies targeting PD-L1 including atezolizumab, durvalumab, and avelumab have now received accelerated approval from the FDA as second line treatments for mUC, with durable response lasting more than 1 year in some patients. Some of these agents are approved in the first line setting as well - based on single-arm phase II studies atezolizumab and pembrolizumab received accelerated approval for first-line treatment of cisplatin ineligible patients. Despite these multiple approvals, the development of clinically useful biomarkers to determine the optimal treatment for patients remains somewhat elusive. In this review, we examine key clinical trial results with anti-PD1/PD-L1 antibodies and discuss progress towards developing novel biomarkers beyond PD-L1 expression.Entities:
Keywords: Atezolizumab; Avelumab; Biomarker; Bladder cancer; Durvalumab; Immune checkpoint inhibitor; Immunotherapy; Nanostring; Nivolumab; PD-1; Pd-L1; Pembrolizumab; Tumor mutation burden
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29157296 PMCID: PMC5697433 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-017-0299-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Timeline of clinical studies of programmed cell death protein/programed death-ligand 1 inhibitors in urothelial carcinoma
Response rates and median overall survival with FDA approved anti-PD-1/PD-L1 blockade in metastatic urothelial carcinoma
| Medication | Phase | # Patients | ORR (%) | PFS (m.) | OS (m.) | PD-L1 Response | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metastatic 2nd Line Therapy |
| I | 100 | 21.0 | – | 8 | – | Powles et al. [ | |
| II | 310 | 15.0 | 2.1 | 7.9 | PD-L1 on IC > 5% associated with ORR, testing not required for treatment | Rosenberg et al. [ | |||
|
| III | P | 270 | 21.6 | 2.1 | 10.3 | PD-L1 TC and IC composite score > 10%, no difference in ORR or mOS | Bellmunt et al. [ | |
| C | 272 | 6.7 | 3.3 | 7.4 | – | ||||
|
| II | 270 | 19.6 | 2.0 | 8.74 | PD-L1 on TC > 1% not associated with ORR but associated with OS | Sharma et al. [ | ||
|
| Ib/II | 241 | 17.6 | 1.6 | 7.0 | PD-L1 on TC > 5% associated with improved ORR, no OS data as of yet | Apolo et al. [ | ||
|
| Ib | 191 | 17.8 | – | – | Composite biomarker of PD-L1 > 25% on TC or IC predicts response rates, approved companion diagnostic | Massard et al. [ | ||
| Metastatic 1st Line* |
| II | 100 | 23.0 | 2.7 | 15.9 | PD-L1 on IC not associated with improved ORR or mOS | Balar et al. [ | |
|
| II | 370 | 29.0 | – | – | PD-L1 TC and IC composite score with cutoff of 10%, no difference noted in ORR | Balar et al. [ | ||
*Cisplatin Ineligible Patients
On-going combination immunotherapy trials in urothelial cancer
| Therapy | Number | Phase | Trial ID | Est. Completion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nivolumab +/− Ipilimumab (CheckMate-032) | 1150 | I/II | NCT01928394 | December 2018 |
| Atezolizumab + MOXR0916 (anti-OX40) +/− Bevacizumab | 762 | I | NCT02410512 | August 2018 |
| CPI-444 + Atezolizumab | 534 | I/Ib | NCT02655822 | June 2018 |
| Pembrolizumab + PLX3397 (CSF1R) | 400 | I/II | NCT02452424 | July 2019 |
| BMS-986106 (anti-LAG3) +/− Nivolumab | 360 | I/II | NCT01968109 | October 2019 |
| MK-7684 +/− Pembrolizumab | 336 | I | NCT02964013 | March 2020 |
| GSK3174998 (anti-OX40) +/− Pembrolizumab | 264 | I | NCT02528357 | January 2020 |
| Pembrolizuamb + Lenvatinib | 250 | Ib/II | NCT02501096 | January 2018 |
| Durvalumab + Epacadostat | 185 | I/II | NCT02318277 | January 2018 |
| Pembrolizumab + Ramucirumab | 155 | I | NCT02443324 | June 2018 |
| Nivolumab + Cabozantinib +/− Ipilimumab | 135 | I | NCT02496208 | December 2017 |
| Atezolizumab + Epacadostat | 118 | I | NCT02298153 | November 2020 |
| Durvalumab + (Olaparib or Vistusertib or | 110 | I | NCT02546661 | March 2019 |
| Durvalumab + Tremelimumab + polyICLC (TLR3 agonist) | 102 | I/II | NCT02643303 | August 2022 |
| Pembrolizuamb +/− Acalabrutinib | 75 | II | NCT02351739 | Summer 2017 |
| Tremelimumab +/− Durvalumab | 64 | II | NCT02527434 | October 2018 |
| Ipilimumab + Enoblituzumab (anti-B7-H3) | 59 | I | NCT02381314 | March 2018 |
| Atezolizumab + B-701 (FGFR3 inhibitor) | 48 | Ib | NCT03123055 | April 2017 |
| Pembrolizumab + Vorinostat | 42 | I | NCT02619253 | May 2018 |
| Pembrolizumab + Docetaxel or Gemcitabine | 38 | I | NCT02437370 | December 2019 |
| Nivolumab + Enadenotucirev (oncolytic virus) | 30 | I | NCT02636036 | June 2018 |
| Avelumab + NHS-IL-12 | 30 | I | NCT02994953 | April 2018 |
| Pembrolizumab + Paclitaxel | 27 | II | NCT02581982 | March 2019 |
| Nivolumab + IFN-γ | 15 | I | NCT02614456 | December 2017 |
On-going studies evaluating first-line therapies for metastatic urothelial cancer
| Therapy | Number | Phase | Primary Endpoint | Trial ID | Estimated Completion Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atezolizumab + Gemcitabine/Carboplatin vs. Gemcitabine/Carboplatin (IMvigor 130) | 1200 | III | PFS/OS | NCT02807636 | July 2020 |
| Pembrolizumab +/− Platinum vs Gemcitabine/Platinum (Keynote 361) | 990 | III | PFS/OS | NCT02853305 | March 2020 |
| Durvalumab +/− Tremelimumab vs. Gemcitabine/Carboplatin (1:1:1) | 525 | III | PFS/OS | NCT02516241 | July 2019 |
| Pembrolizumab + CVA21 (Coxsackievirus A21) | 90 | I | Safety | NCT02043665 | August 2019 |
| Nivolumab + NEO-PV-1 (personalized peptide vaccine) | 90 | Ib | Safety | NCT02897765 | December 2020 |
| Pembrolizumab + sEphB4-HSA | 60 | II | OS | NCT02717156 | November 2020 |
| Gemcitabine/Cisplatin +/− Ipilimumab (Active, not accruing) | 36 | II | Safety/ORR | NCT01524991 | November 2017 |
| Atezolizumab +/− Gemcitabine Cisplatin (First line metastatic or MIBC) | 30 | I/II | Safety | NCT02989584 | December 2020 |
Fig. 2Tumor mutation burden as a biomarker for anti-PD-1/PD-L1 therapy. a Kaplan-Meier estimate of overall survival according to estimated mutational burden by quartiles in mUC patients treated with atezolizumab in IMVigor 210 – Cohort I. Range estimates next to each qauartile indicated number of mutations per megabase for each quartile. b Quantification of mutation burden across TCGA subtypes and PD-L1 immune cell IHC status and correlation with disease status. c and d Progression-free survival based on tertile of tumor mutation burden from Checkmate 026, a randomized study of nivolumab (c) compared to standard of care chemotherapy (d). A and B reprinted from The Lancet, Vol. 389, Balar et al. “Atezolizumab as first-line treatment in cisplatin-ineligible patients with locally advanced and metastatic urothelial carcinoma: a single-arm, multicenter, phase 2 trial, p. 73, 2017 with permission from Elsevier [10]. C and D reproduced with permission from Carbone, D. et al. NEJM. 2017., [48]
Fig. 3Advantages and disadvantages of potential biomarkers for immunotherapy
Fig. 4Components of the tumor inflammatory signature as assessed by immune cell gene expression profiling. a Complex interplay of chemokines and cytokines classify the inflammatory state of the tumor microenvironment. Interferon-g (IFN-g) released by activated T cells and NK cells activates STAT1, IDO-1 (indolamine oxygenase I) and CMKLR1 in dendritic cells and macrophages (1). STAT-1 mediated signaling and additional pathways produce the chemokines CCL5 and CXCL9 (2). This recruits additional T cells into the tumor microenviroment through CXCR6. IFN-g stimulates the expression of HLA molecules and proteasome components including PSMB10 (3). Finally, IFN-g upregulates a number of immune checkpoint molecules including PD-L1, PD-L2, TIGIT, LAG-3, and B7-H3 on T cells (4). b Components of 18-gene immune signature under evaluation in prospective trials with pembrolizumab