| Literature DB >> 29966520 |
Muhammad Zubair Afzal1, Rima R Mercado1, Keisuke Shirai2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Metformin is one of the biguanides commonly used in patients with type II Diabetes Mellitus. Apart from its hypoglycemic properties, metformin also inhibits the cell cycle by restricting protein synthesis and cell proliferation via regulating the LKB1/AMPL pathway. Furthermore, it also enhances the PD-1 blockade through a reduction of tumor hypoxia. Metformin has shown a significant favorable impact on treatment-related outcomes in solid tumors, but these outcomes have not been replicated in the limited clinical studies done on malignant melanoma. Moreover, none of these studies have reported on the efficacy of the combined use of metformin and immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). <br> METHODS: This is a retrospective cohort study that includes patients diagnosed with metastatic malignant melanoma and treated with ipilimumab, nivolumab, and/or pembrolizumab (Cohort A); or ipilimumab, nivolumab, and/or pembrolizumab plus metformin (Cohort B) between January 1st 2011 through December 15th 2017. In this study, patients are stratified based on anti-PD-1 only and anti-CTLA4/anti-PD-1 combination therapies in each cohort. Objective response rate (ORR) is the primary endpoint. Disease control rate (DCR), overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) are the secondary endpoints. <br> RESULTS: Cohort A had 33 patients (60%), while cohort B had 22 (40%). Overall patient characteristics were similar between both cohorts. ORR was higher in cohort B (68.2% vs. 54.5%, P = 0.31). The DCR was higher in cohort B as well (77.3% vs. 60.6%, P = 0.19). Median OS (46.7 months vs. 28 months), and median PFS (19.8 months vs. 5 months) were longer in cohort B. However, on univariate and multivariate analyses, none of these differences were statistically significant. The mean number of new metastatic sites which appeared during therapy were significantly higher in cohort A (A:1.51 vs. B:0.59, P = 0.009). <br> CONCLUSION: We have observed favorable treatment-related outcomes (ORR, DCR, median PFS and median OS) in patients who have received metformin in combination with ICIs without reaching significance, probably, due to small sample size. Hence, large prospective clinical trials are required to study the synergistic effect of metformin in combination with ICIs before it can be recommended as routine additive therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-PD-1/anti-CTLA-4; Ipilimumab; Malignant melanoma; Metformin; Nivolumab; Pembrolizumab
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29966520 PMCID: PMC6027578 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-018-0375-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
General Patient Characteristics (IAE’s = Immune-related Adverse Events)
| Variables | Cohort A (No Metformin) | Cohort B (Metformin) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean Age at Diagnosis (Years) | 60.8 ± 15.3 | 67.4 ± 12.6 | |
| Sex | |||
| Male | 19 (57.6%) | 15 (68.2%) | |
| Female | 14 (42.4%) | 7 (31.8%) | |
| Dead | 11 (36.4%) | 5 (22.7%) | |
| TNM Stage | |||
| IIIC | 2 (6%) | 0 (0%) | |
| IV | 31 (94%) | 22 (100%) | |
| BRAF Mutations | 14 (58.3%) | 11 (73.3%) | |
| NRAS Mutations | 5 (21.7%) | 4 (26.7%) | |
| Mean no. of mutations | 1.3 ± 0.8 | 1.46 ± 0.9 | |
| History of Diabetes | 1 (3%) | 17 (77.3%) | |
| Median Metformin Dose | 500 mg BID (Range 500 mg BID – 1000 mg BID) | ||
| Median duration of Metformin Therapy (Months) | 13.5 (0.5–108.7) | ||
| Radiation therapy | 6 (18.2%) | 2 (9%) | |
| Prior Chemo/Immunotherapy | 14 (42.4%) | 9 (40.9%) | |
| Immunotherapy | |||
| Anti- PD-1 (Pembrolizumab, Nivolumab) | 20 (60.6%) | 14 (63.6%) | |
| Ipilimumab/Nivolumab | 9 (27.2%) | 6 (27.3%) | |
| Ipilimumab | 4 (12.1%) | 2 (9.1%) | |
| Progression | 20 (60.6%) | 10 (45.4%) | |
| Mean number of metastatic site involved before starting therapy | 2.54 ± 1 | 2.36± 0.95 | |
| Mean number of new metastatic site appeared while on therapy | 1.51±1.5 | 0.59± 0.5 | |
| Skeletal Metastasis | |||
| Before therapy | 7 (21.2%) | 4 (18.2%) | |
| During Therapy | 6 (18.2%) | 3 (13.6%) | |
| Brain Metastasis | |||
| Before therapy | 6 (18.2%) | 2 (9%) | |
| New brain metastasis during therapy | 5 (15.2%) | 1 (4.5%) | |
| IAE | 20 (60%) | 13 (59%) | |
| Prednisone required for IAE’s | 18 (54.5%) | 13 (59%) | |
| Performance Status | |||
| 0 | 12 (36.4%) | 11 (50%) | |
| 1 | 14 (42.4%) | 8 (36.4%) | |
| 2 | 7 (21.2%) | 2 (9.1%) | |
| 3 | 0 (0%) | 1 (4.5%) | |
Fig. 1Overall and Progression Free Survival (a-b) and Overall and progression free survival in patients receiving PD-1 only therapy (c-d)
Fig. 2Overall and Progression Free Survival comparison with patients receiving metformin for > 5 months (a-b)
Overall and Progression Free Survival (All patients)
| Cohort A (No Metformin) | Cohort B (Metformin) |
|---|---|
| Overall Survival | |
| • 67.7% patients alive at 1 year | • 88.2% patients alive at 1 year |
| • 62.0% patients alive at 2 years | • 73.3% patients alive at 2 years |
| • 20.7% patients alive at 3 years | • 73.3% patients alive at 3 years |
| Progression Free Survival | |
| • 36.6% patients free from progression at 1 year | • 56.1% patients free from progression at 1 year |
| • 31.3% patients free from progression at 2 years | • 49.1% patients free from progression at 2 years |
Overall and Progression free survival in Patients receiving only PD-1 therapy
| Cohort A (No Metformin) | Cohort B (Metformin) |
|---|---|
| Overall Survival | |
| • 64.6% patients alive at 1 year | • 100% patients alive at 1 year |
| • 55.4% patients alive at 2 years | • 72.9% patients alive at 2 years |
| Progression Free Survival | |
| • 36.3% patients free from progression at 1 year | • 59.6% patients free from progression at 1 year |
| • 27.2% patients free from progression at 2 years | • 47.6% patients free from progression at 2 years |
Overall Best Response Per RECIST V 1.1 and for Patients with Metformin Duration of > 5 Months (PR = Partial Response, CR = Complete Response, SD = Stable Disease, PD = Progressive Disease, ORR = Objective Response Rate, DCR = Disease Control Rate)
| All Patients | No Metformin | Metformin | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best Response | |||
| PR | 14 (42.4%) | 9 (40.9%) | |
| CR | 4 (12.1%) | 6 (27.27%) | |
| SD | 2 (6%) | 2 (9.1%) | |
| PD | 13 (39.4%) | 5 (22.7%) | |
| ORR | 54.5% | 68.2% | |
| DCR | 60.6% | 77.3% | |
| Median Time to Achieve Best Response (months) | 2.7 | 2.8 | |
| Metformin Duration of > 5 Months | No Metformin | Metformin | |
| Best Response | |||
| PR | 14 (42.4%) | 5 (31.2%) | |
| CR | 4 (12.1%) | 6 (37.5%) | |
| SD | 2 (6%) | 2 (12.5%) | |
| PD | 13 (39.4%) | 3 (18.8%) | |
| ORR | 54.5% | 68.7% | |
| DCR | 60.6% | 81.3% | |
| Median Time to Achieve Best Response (months) | 2.7 | 3 | |
Stratification of Best response based on type of Immunotherapy (PR = Partial Response, CR = Complete Response, SD = Stable Disease, PD = Progressive Disease, ORR = Objective Response Rate, DCR = Disease Control Rate)
| Anti-PD-1 | No Metformin | Metformin | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best Response | |||
| PR | 8 (40%) | 7 (50%) | |
| CR | 3 (15%) | 3 (21.4%) | |
| SD | 2 (10%) | 2 (14.3%) | |
| PD | 7 (35%) | 2 (14.3%) | |
| ORR | 55% | 71.4% | |
| DCR | 65% | 85.7% | |
| Median time to achieve best response (Months) | 2.8 | 2.8 | |
| Ipilimumab/Nivolumab | No Metformin | Metformin | |
| Best Response | |||
| PR | 6 (66.7%) | 1 (16.7) | |
| CR | 1 (11.1%) | 2 (33.3%) | |
| SD | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | |
| PD | 2 (22.2%) | 3 (50%) | |
| ORR | 77.7% | 50% | |
| DCR | 77.7% | 50% | |
| Median time to achieve best response (Months) | 2.5 | 2.8 | |