| Literature DB >> 29255458 |
Zijun Y Xu-Monette1, Mingzhi Zhang2, Jianyong Li3, Ken H Young1,4.
Abstract
PD-1-PD-L1 interaction is known to drive T cell dysfunction, which can be blocked by anti-PD-1/PD-L1 antibodies. However, studies have also shown that the function of the PD-1-PD-L1 axis is affected by the complex immunologic regulation network, and some CD8+ T cells can enter an irreversible dysfunctional state that cannot be rescued by PD-1/PD-L1 blockade. In most advanced cancers, except Hodgkin lymphoma (which has high PD-L1/L2 expression) and melanoma (which has high tumor mutational burden), the objective response rate with anti-PD-1/PD-L1 monotherapy is only ~20%, and immune-related toxicities and hyperprogression can occur in a small subset of patients during PD-1/PD-L1 blockade therapy. The lack of efficacy in up to 80% of patients was not necessarily associated with negative PD-1 and PD-L1 expression, suggesting that the roles of PD-1/PD-L1 in immune suppression and the mechanisms of action of antibodies remain to be better defined. In addition, important immune regulatory mechanisms within or outside of the PD-1/PD-L1 network need to be discovered and targeted to increase the response rate and to reduce the toxicities of immune checkpoint blockade therapies. This paper reviews the major functional and clinical studies of PD-1/PD-L1, including those with discrepancies in the pathologic and biomarker role of PD-1 and PD-L1 and the effectiveness of PD-1/PD-L1 blockade. The goal is to improve understanding of the efficacy of PD-1/PD-L1 blockade immunotherapy, as well as enhance the development of therapeutic strategies to overcome the resistance mechanisms and unleash the antitumor immune response to combat cancer.Entities:
Keywords: MSI; PD-1; PD-L1; TMB; biomarker; combination immunotherapy; immune checkpoint blockade; resistance mechanism
Year: 2017 PMID: 29255458 PMCID: PMC5723106 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01597
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Brief summary of the results of anti-PD-1 therapy clinical trials leading to US food and drug administration approval.
| Antibody; reference | Clinical trial | Efficacy | PD-L1 biomarker |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pembrolizumab; Robert et al. ( | Phase 1b KEYNOTE-001 trial in 173 patients with advanced melanoma progressed following ipilimumab and if | ORR: 26%; 88% of responses were durable | Pooled analysis ( |
| Pembrolizumab; Ribas et al. ( | Phase 2 KEYNOTE-002 trial in 540 patients with unresectable or metastatic melanoma who were refractory to prior ipilimumab and if | For 2–10 mg/kg pembrolizumab vs. chemotherapy, 6-month PFS: 34–38 vs. 16% (HR: 0.57/0.50, | For 2–10 mg/kg pembrolizumab vs. chemotherapy, 24-month PFS: 16–22 vs. <1%; 24-month OS: 36–38 vs. 30% (HR: 0.86/0.74, |
| Pembrolizumab, first- or second-line alone; Robert et al. ( | Phase 3 KEYNOTE-006 trial in 834 patients with advanced melanoma previously untreated or received no more than one line of prior systemic therapy | 6-month PFS: 47.3 or 46.4%; 12-month OS: 74.1 or 68.4%; ORR: 33.7 or 32.9% | PFS and OS were better in PD-L1+ patients compared with PD-L1− patients. Pembrolizumab vs. ipilimumab: better PFS in both PD-L1+ and PD-L1− groups (HR: 0.53/0.52 and 0.67/0.76), better OS only in PD-L1+ patients (HR: 0.55/0.58) |
| Nivolumab; Weber et al. ( | Phase 3 CheckMate 037 trial in 405 patients with advanced melanoma who progressed after ipilimumab or ipilimumab and a BRAF inhibitor if | ORR 31.7 vs. 10.6% for chemotherapy | ORR with nivolumab vs. with chemo: in PD-L1+ patients (surface expression, cutoff: ≥5% tumor cells, Dako; prevalence: 49%), 43.6 vs. 9.1%; in PD-L1− patients, 20.3 vs. 13.0% |
| Nivolumab; first-line alone; Robert et al. ( | Phase 3 CheckMate 066 trial in 418 previously untreated patients who had metastatic melanoma without a BRAF mutation | Improved ORR and survival rates compared with dacarbazine: ORR: 40 vs. 13.9%; 1-year OS: 72.9 vs. 42.1%; median PFS: 5.1 vs. 2.2 months (all | ORR improvement in PD-L1+ (≥5% tumor cells) patients (prevalence: 35.4%): 52.7 vs. 10.8%; in PD-L1− patients: 33.1 vs. 15.7%. OS improvement: HR for death, 0.30 in PD-L1+ patients and 0.48 in PD-L1− patients |
| Nivolumab alone or combined with ipilimumab, first-line; Larkin et al. ( | Phase 3 CheckMate 067 trial in 945 previously untreated patients with metastatic melanoma | Median PFS: 11.5 months with nivolumab plus ipilimumab vs. 2.9 months with ipilimumab ( | With nivolumab alone, in PD-L1+ patients, median PFS: 14.0 months, ORR: 57.5%; in PD-L1− patients, median PFS: 5.3 months, ORR: 41.3%. Combination benefit showed in PD-L1− patients: with combination, ORR: 54.8%, median PFS: 11.2 months; with nivolumab alone, ORR: 41.3%, median PFS: 5.3 months; PD-L1+ cutoff: ≥5% tumor surface expression, Dako 28-8; PD-L1+ prevalence: 23.6% |
| Combined nivolumab and ipilimumab, first-line; Hodi et al. ( | Phase 2 CheckMate 069 trial in 142 patients with previously untreated advanced melanoma | For combination vs. ipilimumab alone, ORR: 60 vs. 11%; median PFS: 8.9 vs. 4.7 months; 2-year OS: 63.8 vs. 53.6% | PD-L1 positivity (cutoff: ≥5% tumor cells, Dako 28-8; prevalence: 30%) did not correlate with ORR or PFS |
| Nivolumab and ipilimumab for adjuvant therapy; Weber et al. ( | Phase 3 CheckMate 238 trial in 906 patients with resected advanced melanoma | 12-month PFS with nivolumab vs. with ipilimumab: 70.5 vs. 60.8% ( | 12-month PFS in PD-L1+ (cutoff: ≥5% tumor cells, Dako 28-8) patients (prevalence: ~34%), 81.9 vs. 73.8%; in PD-L1− patients, 64.3 vs. 53.7% |
| Nivolumab; Brahmer et al. ( | Phase 3 CheckMate 017 trial in 272 patients with advanced, refractory squamous NSCLC | For nivolumab vs. docetaxel, ORR: 20 vs. 9% ( | Tumor PD-L1 membranous expression (Dako 28-8) was neither prognostic nor correlated with response; PD-L1+ prevalence: 52–54, 36, and 31% using cutoffs of ≥1, ≥5, and ≥10%, respectively |
| Nivolumab; Borghaei et al. ( | Phase 3 CheckMate 057 trial in 582 patients with advanced, refractory, or relapsed non-squamous NSCLC | For nivolumab vs. docetaxel, ORR: 19 vs. 12% ( | Tumor PD-L1 membrane expression (Dako 28-8) correlated with greater efficacy; only in PD-L1+ patients, nivolumab was superior; PD-L1+ prevalence: 53–55, 38–41, and 35–37% using cutoffs of ≥1%, ≥5%, and ≥10%, respectively |
| Pembrolizumab; Garon et al. ( | Phase 1 KEYNOTE-001 trial in 495 patients with advanced NSCLC | ORR: 19.4%; median DOR: 12.5 months; median PFS: 3.7 months; median OS: 12.0 months | In PD-L1hi (≥50% tumor cells with membranous expression; anti-PD-L1 clone 22C3, Merck) patients (prevalence: 23.2%), ORR: 45.2%; median PFS: 6.3 months; median OS: not reached |
| Pembrolizumab; Herbst et al. ( | Phase 2/3 KEYNOTE-010 trial in 1,034 patients with previously treated PD-L1+ (≥1% tumor) advanced NSCLC | For 2 or 10 mg/kg pembrolizumab vs. docetaxel, median OS: 10.4 ( | In PD-L1hi (≥50%, Dako 22C3) patients (prevalence: 40–44%), median OS: 14.9 months ( |
| Pembrolizumab, first-line alone; Reck et al. ( | Phase 3 KEYNOTE-024 in 305 patients with PD-L1hi (≥50%) advanced NSCLC | For pembrolizumab vs. chemotherapy, ORR: 44.8 vs. 27.8%; median PFS: 10.3 vs. 6.0 months ( | PD-L1hi (≥50%; Dako PD-L1 IHC 22C3 pharmDx assay) prevalence: 30.2% |
| Pembrolizumab, first-line combination; Langer et al. ( | Phase 2 KEYNOTE-021 trial in 123 patients with previously untreated advanced, non-squamous NSCLC | For pembrolizumab plus chemo vs. chemotherapy alone, ORR: 55 vs. 29% ( | Combination benefit was shown in PD-L1hi (≥50%; prevalence: 27–33%) and PD-L1− (<1%; prevalence: 35–37%) groups but not in the PD-L1inter (1–49%; prevalence: 32–37%) group. ORR: 80, 57, and 26%, respectively; membranous PD-L1 expression, Dako IHC 22C3 pharmDx assay |
| Nivolumab; Motzer et al. ( | Phase 3 CheckMate 025 trial in 821 patients with advanced clear cell renal cell carcinoma | For nivolumab vs. everolimus, ORR: 25 vs. 5% ( | Median OS with nivolumab vs. with everolimus: in PD-L1+ patients, 21.8 vs. 18.8 months; in PD-L1− patients, 27.4 vs. 21.2 months; PD-L1+ cutoff: ≥1% tumor cells, membranous expression, Dako assay; prevalence: 24% |
| Nivolumab; Younes et al. ( | Phase 2 CheckMate 205 trial in 80 patients with classical Hodgkin lymphoma that failed to respond to autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and brentuximab vedotin | ORR: 66.3%; 6-month PFS: 76.9%; 6-month OS: 98.7% | High and low tumor PD-L1 H score (prevalence: both 26%) showed correlation with complete response and progression, respectively; H score was calculated by multiplying the% of PD-L1+ malignant cells [by double staining with anti-PD-L1 (405.9A11) and anti-PAX5 mAbs] by the average intensity of positive staining (1, 2, or 3+) |
| Pembrolizumab; Chen et al. ( | Phase 2 KEYNOTE-087 trial in 210 patients with classical Hodgkin lymphoma that progressed after autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and/or brentuximab vedotin | ORR: 69%; 6-month PFS: 72.4%; 6-month OS: 99.5%; 75.6% of patients had a response for ≥6 months | Clinical activity was seen across all PD-L1 groups defined by PD-L1 intensity score, tumor-membrane staining score, and histiocyte score (QualTek IHC assay); 90.4% of patients had an intensity score of 3; 88.1% had 100% PD-L1+ membrane staining; 71.8% had a histiocyte score of 3 |
| Pembrolizumab; Larkins et al. ( | Phase 1b KEYNOTE-012 trial in 174 patients with recurrent or metastatic HNSCC | ORR: 16%; DOR: 2.4+ to 27.7+ months; 82% had response durations of ≥6 months | PD-L1+ (cutoff: ≥1% tumor cells, membranous expression) prevalence: 65% |
| Nivolumab; Ferris et al. ( | Phase 3 CheckMate 141 in 361 patients with recurrent HNSCC | For nivolumab vs. standard therapy, ORR: 13.3 vs. 5.8%; median OS: 7.5 vs. 5.1 months (HR: 0.70, | Nivolumab vs. standard therapy: in PD-L1+ patients, median OS: 8.7 vs. 4.6 months, HR: 0.55; in PD-L1− patients, median OS: 5.7 vs. 5.8 months, HR: 0.89; PD-L1+ (cutoff: ≥1% tumor cells, membranous expression, Dako 28-8) prevalence: 57.3% |
| Nivolumab; Sharma et al. ( | Phase 2 CheckMate 275 trial in 270 patients with metastatic urothelial carcinoma | ORR: 19.6%; median OS: 11.30 months for PD-L1+ patients, 5.95 months for PD-L1− (<1%) patients | ORR: 28.4 or 23.8% in PD-L1+ patients using ≥5% or ≥1% PD-L1+ cutoff (prevalence: 31 and 46%, respectively); 16.1% in PD-L1− patients; tumor-membrane PD-L1 expression was evaluated by the Dako PD-L1 IHC 28-8 pharmDx kit |
| Pembrolizumab; Bellmunt et al. ( | Phase 3 KEYNOTE-045 trial in 542 patients with advanced urothelial cancer | For pembrolizumab vs. chemotherapy, ORR: 21.1 vs. 11.4% (HR: 0.73, | Pembrolizumab was more superior to chemotherapy in patients with ≥10% PD-L1 combined positive score (prevalence: 30.3%): median OS, 8.6 vs. 4.2 months (HR: 0.57, |
| Pembrolizumab; Le et al. ( | Phase 2 NCT01876511 trial in 41 patients with progressive metastatic carcinoma | For dMMR vs. mismatch-repair-proficient colorectal cancer, ORR: 40 vs. 0%; immune-related PFS: 78 vs. 11% | |
| Pembrolizumab; Le et al. ( | Phase 2 NCT01876511 trial in 86 patients with advanced dMMR cancers (12 types) | ORR: 53%; median PFS/OS: not reached | |
| Nivolumab; Overman et al. ( | Phase 2 CheckMate 142 trial in 74 patients with recurrent or metastatic dMMR/MSI-H colorectal cancer | ORR: 31.1%; median DOR: not reached; estimated 1-year OS: 86% | |
| Nivolumab; El-Khoueiry et al. ( | Phase 1/2 CheckMate 040 trial in 154 patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma | ORR: 14.3%; DOR: 3.2 to 38.2+ months; 91% of responses lasted 6+ months; 55% of responses lasted 12+ months | Responses were observed regardless of PD-L1 levels (tumor-membrane expression, Dako PD-L1 IHC 28-8 pharmDx assay) |
| Pembrolizumab; Refa below | Phase 2 KEYNOTE-059 trial in 259 patients with recurrent locally advanced or metastatic gastric or gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma | In 7 MSI-H patients (prevalence: 3%): ORR: 57%; DOR: 5.3+ to 14.1+ months | In 143 PD-L1+ (≥ 1% PD-L1 combined positive score) patients: ORR: 13.3%; DOR: 2.8 to 19.4+ months; 58% of responses lasted 6+ months; 26% of responses lasted 12+ months; PD-L1 combined positive score was the% of PD-L1+ tumor and immune cells relative to tumor cells, Dako PD-L1 IHC 22C3 pharmDx kit |
ORR, objective response rate; PFS, progression-free survival (rate); OS, overall survival (rate); DOR, duration of response; HR, hazard ratio; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; HNSCC, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; MSI-H, microsatellite instability-high; dMMR, mismatch-repair deficient.
.
Brief summary of the results of anti-PD-L1 therapy clinical trials leading to US food and drug administration approval.
| Antibody | Clinical trial | Efficacy | PD-L1 biomarker | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atezolizumab | Phase 2 IMvigor210 trial in 310 patients with previously treated inoperable locally advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma | ORR: 15%; 84% of responses were ongoing; ORR in patients with ≥5% PD-L1 immune cells (IC) score vs. in patients with <1% IC score: 27 vs. 8% or 26 vs. 13% ( | Percentage of PD-L1+ immune cells in the tumor microenvironment correlated with response; prevalence of ≥5% PD-L1 IC score: 32%; prevalence for <1% IC score: 33%; Ventana SP142 PD-L1 assay | Rosenberg et al. ( |
| Atezolizumab, first-line alone | Phase 2 IMvigor210 trial in 119 patients with cisplatin-ineligible locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer | ORR: 23%; 70% of responses were ongoing; median PFS: 2.7 months; median OS: 15.9 months | Responses occurred across all PD-L1 subgroups according to the % of PD-L1+ immune cells in the tumor microenvironment; prevalence for ≥5% PD-L1 IC score: 27%; Ventana SP142 PD-L1 assay | Balar et al. ( |
| Durvalumab | Phase 1/2 trial (NCT01693562) in 191 patients with locally advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma | ORR: 17.8%; median PFS: 1.5 months; median OS: 18.2 months; 1-year OS rate: 55% | ORR in patients with high PD-L1 scores (≥25% tumor cells, Ventana SP263 PD-L1 Assay) vs. in patients with low/0 PD-L1 scores: 26.3 vs. 4.1% | Powles et al. ( |
| Avelumab | Phase 1b JAVELIN Solid Tumor trial in 242 patients with refractory metastatic urothelial carcinoma | ORR: 13.3–16.1%; median response duration had not been reached | ( | |
| Atezolizumab | Phase 3 OAK trial in 850 patients with previously treated NSCLC | For atezolizumab vs. docetaxel, median OS: 13.8 vs. 9.6 months ( | In PD-L1+ patients (prevalence: 54%), median OS: 15.7 months with atezolizumab vs. 10.3 months with docetaxel ( | Rittmeyer et al. ( |
| Atezolizumab | Phase 2 POLAR trial in 277 patients with previously treated advanced or metastatic NSCLC | For atezolizumab vs. docetaxel, median OS: 12.6 vs. 9.7 months ( | PD-L1 on both tumor and immune cells were evaluated, Ventana SP142 PD-L1 assay; compared with docetaxel, OS with atezolizumab was improved in patients with ≥1% score (prevalence: 68%) but not in patients with <1% score (HR 0.59 and 1.04; | Fehrenbacher et al. ( |
| Avelumab | Phase 2 JAVELIN Merkel 200 trial in 88 patients with refractory metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma | ORR 31.8%; 82% of responses were ongoing | ORR: 34.5% in PD-L1+ patients (prevalence: ~78%); 18.8% in PD-L1− patients; PD-L1+ cutoff: ≥1% tumor cells, detected by Merck anti-PD-L1 clone 78-10 | Kaufman et al. ( |
ORR, objective response rate; PFS, progression-free survival; OS, overall survival; DOR, duration of response; HR, hazard ratio; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer.
Examples of anti-PD-1/L1 clinical trials that missed the endpoint or were discontinued owing to increased risk of death.
| Regimen | Clinical trial | Efficacy | Toxicities | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nivolumab as first-line monotherapy compared with chemotherapy | Phase 3 CheckMate 026 trial in 423 patients with previously untreated stage IV or recurrent NSCLC with PD-L1 scores ≥5% | For nivolumab vs. chemotherapy, median PFS: 4.2 vs. 5.9 months (HR: 1.15; | Carbone et al. ( | |
| Nivolumab compared with investigator’s choice chemotherapy | Phase 3 CheckMate 037 trial in 405 patients with ipilimumab-refractory advanced melanoma | For nivolumab vs. chemotherapy, higher and more durable responses but no survival improvement: median OS: 16 vs. 14 months; median PFS: 3.1 vs. 3.7 months | Larkin et al. ( | |
| Pomalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone with or without pembrolizumab | Phase 3 KEYNOTE-183 trial in 249 patients with refractory or relapsed multiple myeloma | ORR: 34% in the pembrolizumab arm vs. 40% in the control arm; time-to-progression: 8.1 vs. 8.7 months (HR: 1.14) | At median follow-up of 8.1 months, 29 deaths in the pembrolizumab arm vs. 21 deaths in the control arm (HR: 1.61) | |
| Lenalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone with or without pembrolizumab | Phase 3 KEYNOTE-185 trial in 301 patients with newly diagnosed and treatment-naïve multiple myeloma | ORR: 64% in the pembrolizumab arm vs. 62% in the control arm; HR for time-to-progression: 0.55 | At a median follow-up of 6.6 months, 19 deaths in the pembrolizumab arm compared to 9 deaths in the control arm (HR: 2.06) | |
| Pembrolizumab compared with standard treatment | Phase 3 KEYNOTE-040 trial in 495 patients with previously treated recurrent or metastatic HNSCC | Missed the primary endpoint of OS [HR: 0.82 (95% CI: 0.67–1.01); | Larkins et al. ( | |
| Atezolizumab compared with chemotherapy | Phase 3 IMvigor211 trial in 931 patients with previously treated locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer | Failed to meet the primary endpoint of improving OS | ||
| First-line durvalumab alone or combined with tremelimumab compared with chemotherapy | Phase 3 MYSTIC trial in previously untreated metastatic NSCLC | Did not improve PFS of patients with PD-L1 scores ≥25% compared with chemotherapy | Peters et al. ( | |
NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; PFS, progression-free survival; HR, hazard ratio; OS, overall survival; ORR, objective response rate; HNSCC, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; CI, confidence interval.
.
.
Figure 1Schematic illustration of PD-1/PD-L1 expression in the tumor setting as a marker of T cell activation and driver of T cell dysfunction, as well as a predictive biomarker for response to PD-1/PD-L1 blockade in PD-L1− and PD-L1+ tumors according to the prevailing notion. PD-L2, which is infrequently expressed and potentially has PD-1-independent positive function, is not depicted in the figure for clarity. The PD-L1–CD80 axis is also not illustrated because its role and significance in the cancer setting is unclear. (A) In tumors (or tumor clones) with cell-intrinsic PD-L1 expression driven by the oncogenic pathways, whether anti-PD-1/PD-L1 is effective may depend on the activity of the PD-1–PD-L1 axis. If T-cell infiltration is lacking (a “desert”-like immune landscape, or “cold” tumors), or PD-1 is not expressed on T cells, anti-PD-1 therapy will not elicit a de novo T cell response. If the tumor is infiltrated with immune cells (“hot” tumor) and the oncogenic or immunogenic PD-L1 expression suppresses T cell activation by binding to PD-1 within the T-cell receptor microclusters, anti-PD-1/PD-L1 therapy can be effective. IDO1, NO (nitric oxide), and suppressive cytokines in the tumor microenvironment may contribute to resistance to PD-1/PD-L1 blockade therapy. (B) In tumors without cell-intrinsic PD-L1 expression, tumors (or tumor clones) with low immunogenicity (“cold” tumors) or costimulation may not respond to anti-PD-1/PD-L1 therapy, whereas tumors (or tumor clones) with a high neoantigen load elicit antitumor T cell responses (“hot”) but their response to anti-PD-1/PD-L1 therapy varies. Antigen-specific CD8+ T cells secrete IFN-γ, which may turn PD-L1− tumors into PD-L1+ tumors infiltrated with PD-L1+ macrophages, dendritic cells, and T cells. However, if tumors do not have IFN-γ receptors or have JAK2 mutations, tumors may remain PD-L1− and not respond to anti-PD-1/PD-L1 treatment or respond if PD-L1 is induced on non-tumor immune cells. In PD-L1+ tumors, prolonged antigen stimulation gradually induces PD-1 expression on antigen-specific T cells. PD-1 ligation with PD-L1 induced on tumors, antigen-presenting cells, and T cells in hot tumors in turn suppresses antitumor function of effector T cells, leading to T cell “exhaustion” (a term initially used for T cell dysfunction during chronic viral infection). Early-phase T cell “exhaustion” is plastic and can be reversed by PD-1/PD-L1 blockade; in contrast, if T cell dysfunction is fixed after terminal differentiation, “deeply exhausted” T cells cannot be rescued by PD-1/L1 blockade. Inflexibility in transcriptional and epigenetic programs may contribute to the therapeutic irreversibility of deeply exhausted T cells. Potential markers suggested by studies in tumor models, viral infection models, and cancer patients are summarized below the labels for these two different dysfunctional stages of PD-1+CD8+ T cells. * indicates disparities in PD-1 levels in the literature (please refer to the text for details).