| Literature DB >> 30031393 |
Paolo A Ascierto1, Igor Puzanov2, Sanjiv S Agarwala3, Carlo Bifulco4, Gerardo Botti5, Corrado Caracò6, Gennaro Ciliberto7, Michael A Davies8, Reinhard Dummer9, Soldano Ferrone10, Thomas F Gajewski11, Claus Garbe12, Jason J Luke13, Francesco M Marincola14, Giuseppe Masucci15, Janice M Mehnert16, Nicola Mozzillo17, Giuseppe Palmieri18, Michael A Postow19,20, Stephen P Schoenberger21, Ena Wang22, Magdalena Thurin23.
Abstract
Metastatic melanoma represents a challenging clinical situation and, until relatively recently, there was an absence of effective treatment options. However, in 2011, the advanced melanoma treatment landscape was revolutionised with the approval of the anti-cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein-4 checkpoint inhibitor ipilimumab and the selective BRAF kinase inhibitor vemurafenib, both of which significantly improved overall survival. Since then, availability of new immunotherapies, especially the anti-programmed death-1 checkpoint inhibitors, as well as other targeted therapies, have further improved outcomes for patients with advanced melanoma. Seven years on from the first approval of these novel therapies, evidence for the use of various immune-based and targeted approaches is continuing to increase at a rapid rate. Improved understanding of the tumour microenvironment and tumour immuno-evasion strategies has resulted in different approaches to target and harness the immune response. These new immune-based approaches offer the opportunity for various approaches with distinct modes of action being used in combination with one another, as well as combined with other treatment modalities such as targeted therapy, electrochemotherapy and surgery. The increasing number of treatment options that are now available has resulted in a growing need to identify which patients will derive most benefit from which treatments. Much research is now focused on the identification of biomarkers that can be utilised to help select patients for treatment. These and other recent advances in the management of melanoma were the focus of discussions at the third Melanoma Bridge meeting (30 November-2 December, 2017, Naples, Italy), which is summarised in this report.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Combination strategies; Immunotherapy; Melanoma; Target therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30031393 PMCID: PMC6054754 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-018-1568-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1Adaptive biomarker trial design
Fig. 2Neoantigen discovery and functional validation
Selected potential biomarkers for immunotherapy
| Basis | Challenges | |
|---|---|---|
| PD-L1 | IHC approach to measuring PD-L1 expression on tumour and immune cells | Variability in assays, antibodies and tumour microenvironment |
| CD8+ T cells | PD-1/PD-L1 expression on CD8+ T cells predicts response to PD-1 agents | Optimal cut-off points, scoring metrics and agreement on magnitude of change needed for meaningful prediction of response |
| Tumour mutation load | High mutation load resulting from various factors correlated with response to checkpoint inhibitors in exceptional responders | Availability of adequate tissue for sequencing; whole exome sequencing expensive and slow turnaround time vs. other clinical assays |
| Neoantigen burden | Predict clinical benefit to ipilimumab and PD-1 blockade in melanoma and lung cancer | As above |
| Gene expression profiling | IFN-induced signatures may predict response to checkpoint inhibitors | Sizable tissue collection needed to validate testing and training sets |
Ongoing adjuvant trials
| Study | No. of patients | TNM stage | Therapy | Primary endpoint |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US Intergroup E1609 | 1600 | III (IIIB–c), IV (M1a, M1b) | Ipilimumab 3 mg/kg or 10 g/kg vs HD-IFN | RFS, OS |
| COMBI-AD | 852 | III (BRAF V600E/K) | Dabrafenib + trametinib vs. placebo | RFS |
| BRIM-8 | 725 | IIC, III (BRAF V600; Cobas) | Vemurafenib vs. placebo | DFS |
| EORTC-1325/KEYNOTE-054 | 900 | IIA (> 1 mm met), IIIb–C | Pembrolizumab vs. placebo | RFS, RFS in PDL1+ |
| CheckMate-238 | 800 | IIIB–C, IV | Nivolumab vs. ipilimumab 10 g/kg | RFS |
| US Intergroup S1404 | 1240 | IIIA (N2), IIIB–C, M | Pembrolizumab vs. HD-IFN or ipilimumab 10 mg/kg | RFS, OS |
| C heckMate-915 | 1125 | IIIB–D, IV | Ipilimumab + nivolumab vs ipilimumab or nivolumab | RFS |