| Literature DB >> 30348216 |
Asim Amin1, Elizabeth R Plimack2, Marc S Ernstoff3, Lionel D Lewis4, Todd M Bauer5, David F McDermott6, Michael Carducci7, Christian Kollmannsberger8, Brian I Rini9, Daniel Y C Heng10, Jennifer Knox11, Martin H Voss12, Jennifer Spratlin13, Elmer Berghorn14, Lingfeng Yang14, Hans J Hammers15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Combination treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors and antiangiogenic drugs has shown encouraging preliminary antitumor activity across various tumor types including advanced or metastatic renal cell carcinoma (aRCC). The open-label, parallel-cohort, dose-escalation, phase I CheckMate 016 study evaluated the efficacy and safety of nivolumab in combination with antiangiogenic tyrosine kinase inhibitors or ipilimumab. Long-term outcomes from this study for the combination of nivolumab plus sunitinib or pazopanib in aRCC are presented.Entities:
Keywords: Antiangiogenic; Immune checkpoint inhibitor; Metastatic renal cell carcinoma; Nivolumab; Pazopanib; Sunitinib; Tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30348216 PMCID: PMC6196426 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-018-0420-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics of treated patients
| Characteristic | N + S ( | N + P ( |
|---|---|---|
| Age, years | ||
| Median (range) | 57.0 (38–75) | 56.0 (40–72) |
| Age <65 years, | 24 (72.7) | 17 (85.0) |
| Sex, | ||
| Male | 26 (78.8) | 18 (90.0) |
| Female | 7 (21.2) | 2 (10.0) |
| Race, | ||
| Caucasian | 28 (84.8) | 18 (90.0) |
| Asian | 1 (3.0) | 0 |
| Black/African American | 2 (6.1) | 1 (5.0) |
| Other | 2 (6.1) | 1 (5.0) |
| Ethnicity, | ||
| Hispanic/Latino | 2 (6.1) | 0 |
| Not Hispanic/Latino | 29 (87.9) | 18 (90.0) |
| Not reported | 2 (6.1) | 2 (10.0) |
| MSKCC risk category, | ||
| Favorable | 16 (48.5) | 4 (20.0) |
| Intermediate | 16 (48.5) | 14 (70.0) |
| Poor | 1 (3.0) | 2 (10.0) |
| Prior surgery, | 33 (100.0) | 20 (100.0) |
| Prior radiotherapy, | 5 (15.2) | 10 (50.0) |
| Prior systemic therapy, | 14 (42.4) | 20 (100.0) |
| VEGFR inhibitor | 5 (15.2) | 17 (85.0) |
| Other antiangiogenic | 7 (21.2) | 17 (85.0) |
| Cytokine | 9 (27.3) | 10 (50.0) |
| mTOR inhibitor | 0 | 3 (15.0) |
| Other | 3 (9.1) | 4 (20.0) |
| No. of prior therapies, | ||
| 0 | 19 (57.6) | 0 |
| 1 | 14 (42.4) | 14 (70.0) |
| 2 | 0 | 4 (20.0) |
| 3 | 0 | 1 (5.0) |
| ≥4 | 0 | 1 (5.0) |
| Treatment setting, a
| ||
| Adjuvant | 3 (9.1) | 4 (20.0) |
| Metastatic | 0 | 2 (10.0) |
| Neoadjuvant | 11 (33.3) | 16 (80.0) |
aMore than one setting per patient may be reflected in the frequency
TRAEs (in ≥30% of patients), select TRAEs, and TRAEs leading to discontinuation in ≥2 patients
| TRAE, preferred term, | Treatment arm | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N + S ( | N + P ( | |||
| All grades | Grade 3 or 4 | All grades | Grade 3 or 4 | |
| Total patients with an event | 33 (100.0) | 27 (81.8) | 20 (100.0) | 14 (70.0) |
| Fatigue | 28 (84.8) | 3 (9.1) | 12 (60.0) | 3 (15.0) |
| Diarrhea | 21 (63.6) | 3 (9.1) | 12 (60.0) | 4 (20.0) |
| Dysgeusia | 21 (63.6) | 0 | 10 (50.0) | 0 |
| Nausea | 19 (57.6) | 1 (3.0) | 15 (75.0) | 0 |
| Hypertension | 16 (48.5) | 6 (18.2) | 5 (25.0) | 2 (10.0) |
| Decreased appetite | 16 (48.5) | 1 (3.0) | 8 (40.0) | 0 |
| Increased ALT | 13 (39.4) | 6 (18.2) | 5 (25.0) | 4 (20.0) |
| Palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia syndrome | 13 (39.4) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Increased AST | 12 (36.4) | 3 (9.1) | 6 (30.0) | 4 (20.0) |
| Blood creatinine increased | 11 (33.3) | 2 (6.1) | 1 (5.0) | 0 |
| Hypothyroidism | 11 (33.3) | 0 | 4 (20.0) | 1 (5.0) |
| Dyspepsia | 11 (33.3) | 0 | 4 (20.0) | 0 |
| Dry skin | 11 (33.3) | 0 | 2 (10.0) | 0 |
| Mucosal inflammation | 10 (30.3) | 0 | 5 (25.0) | 0 |
| Dry mouth | 10 (30.3) | 0 | 1 (5.0) | 0 |
| Arthralgia | 8 (24.2) | 0 | 7 (35.0) | 1 (5.0) |
| Pruritus | 8 (24.2) | 0 | 7 (35.0) | 0 |
| Vomiting | 7 (21.2) | 1 (3.0) | 6 (30.0) | 0 |
| Select TRAE, organ class, | ||||
| Skin | 26 (78.8) | 2 (6.1) | 11 (55.0) | 0 |
| Endocrine | 12 (36.4) | 0 | 5 (25.0) | 2 (10.0) |
| Gastrointestinal | 21 (63.6) | 3 (9.1) | 12 (60.0) | 4 (20.0) |
| Hepatic | 15 (45.5) | 8 (24.2) | 7 (35.0) | 4 (20.0) |
| Renal | 13 (39.4) | 4 (12.1) | 1 (5.0) | 0 |
| Pulmonary | 1 (3.0) | 1 (3.0) | 1 (5.0) | 0 |
| TRAE leading to discontinuation, preferred term, | ||||
| Total patients with an event | 13 (39.4) | 11 (33.3) | 5 (25.0) | 4 (20.0) |
| Increased ALT | 3 (9.1) | 2 (6.1) | 3 (15.0) | 3 (15.0) |
| Acute kidney injury | 3 (9.1) | 1 (3.0) | 0 | 0 |
| Increased AST | 1 (3.0) | 1 (3.0) | 3 (15.0) | 3 (15.0) |
aIncludes events reported between the first dose and 100 days after the last dose of study therapy
bIncludes events reported between the first dose and 30 days after the last dose of study therapy
Fig. 1Time to response, duration of response, and time on therapy (weeks) in arm N + S. Patients with confirmed response are presented (n = 18)
Fig. 2Kaplan–Meier plots of progression-free survival (a) and overall survival (b) in arm N + S
Fig. 3Time to response, duration of response, and time on therapy (weeks) in arm N + P. Patients with confirmed response are presented (n = 9, no ongoing responses were observed)
Fig. 4Kaplan–Meier plots of progression-free survival (a) and overall survival (b) in arm N + P