| Literature DB >> 30374524 |
Abstract
More than 3000 clinical trials are evaluating the clinical activity of the PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors as monotherapies and in combinations with other cancer therapies [1]. The PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors are remarkable for their clinical activities in shrinking tumors across a wide range of tumor types, in causing durable responses, and in their tolerability. These attributes position them as favorable agents in clinical combinations. Historically, approaches to cancer therapy combinations focused on agents with orthogonal activities to avoid shared resistance mechanisms and shared toxicities. Although CTLA-4/PD-1 combinations have progressed based on possible immune interactions, additional approaches have used more orthogonal treatments such as standard of care chemotherapies and anti-angiogenesis inhibitors. Using the concept of independent activity pioneered by Bliss [2], examples of these approaches were compared. Both standard of care chemotherapy and anti-angiogenesis combinations show promising clinical activity above that predicted by the independent contributions of the agents tested on their own. In contrast, the combinations of CTLA4/PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors in renal cancer and melanoma show no more activity than that predicted by the independent contributions of the monotherapies. This update on approaches to the development of clinical combination therapies highlights the potential importance of combining PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors with a broad range of clinically active partners.Entities:
Keywords: Immune checkpoint inhibitor; Independent action; PD-1; PD-L1; Pembrolizumab
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30374524 PMCID: PMC6323091 DOI: 10.1007/s00281-018-0714-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Semin Immunopathol ISSN: 1863-2297 Impact factor: 9.623
Clinical activity as measured by overall response rates is associated with success in registration trials
| A: Immunotherapeutic approvals in melanoma | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Product | Name | Approval | Indication | ORR | Reference |
| Proleukin | Interleukin 2 | 1992 | Renal carcinoma | 6% | [ |
| Intron A | Interferon alfa-2b | 2001 | Adjuvant melanoma | 8% | [ |
| Sylatron | Peginterferon alfa-2b | 2011 | Adjuvant melanoma | 6% | [ |
| Yervoy | Ipilimumab | 2011 | Advanced melanoma | 10.9% | [ |
| Keytruda | Pembrolizumab | 2014 | Advanced melanoma | 33% | [ |
| Opdivo | Nivolumab | 2014 | Advanced melanoma | 40% | [ |
| Imlygic | T-Vec | 2015 | Advanced melanoma | 16.3% | [ |
| B: Association of ORR with drug approvals 1976–1993 | |||||
| ORR (%) | Drugs 1976–1993 | Trials that registered 1976–1993 | Trials (%) 1976–19,932 | Registration success (%) 1976–1993 | Reference |
| 0 | 59 | 10 | 33.9% | 16.9% | [ |
| 0.1–5.0 | 64 | 14 | 36.8% | 21.9% | |
| 5.1–10 | 32 | 12 | 18.4% | 37.5% | |
| >10 | 19 | 12 | 10.9% | 63.2% | |
| C: Association of ORR with drug approvals 1985–1999 | |||||
| Tumor type and response rate categories (%) | Total number of drugs | Number of drugs approved for any type of tumor (P) | Registration success (%) 1985–1999 | Reference | |
| 0 | 8 | 1 | 12.5% | [ | |
| >0 and ≤ 10 | 20 | 0 | 0.0% | ||
| >10 and ≤ 20 | 12 | 6 | 50.0% | ||
| > 20 | 6 | 4 | 66.7% | ||
Fig. 1a Histogram showing the overall response rate for PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors used in monotherapy trials. Ninety trials with published ORRs for PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors across 31 indications were identified (references in supplementary materials). These studies also range across all lines of therapy and many were enriched by selection for PD-L1 tumor biomarker expression. These were plotted in a histogram with the x axis depicting the ORR for the trials and the y axis the numbers of trials demonstrating activity at the designated ORR. b The Bliss independent combination. The equation for Bliss independence is shown (Bliss, 1939). The square diagram shows conceptually that a drug with a Ya response rate would combine with a second drug with a Yb response rate, but the combined activity would not be expected to total just the two numbers. Rather their total must be corrected by their random interaction (Ya × Yb), if their interaction is truly independent. x and y axes are a theoretic depiction of the range of possible response rates from 0 to 100% for each drug in a combination
Clinical combinations including PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors
| PD-1 | Combination agent | Indication | Combination ORR | ORR combination agent | PD-1 monotherapy ORR1 | Bliss independence prediction | Additional contribution of combination (Z2) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pembrolizumab | Pemetrexed-carboplatin | NSCLC | 71% [ | 31% [ | 23% [ | 54% | 0.17 |
| Pembrolizumab | Paclitaxel-carboplatin | NSCLC | 52% [ | 15% [ | 23% [ | 38% | 0.14 |
| Pembrolizumab | Paclitaxel-carboplatin-bevacizumab | NSCLC | 48% [ | 35% [ | 23% [ | 58% | − 0.10 |
| Nivolumab | Paclitaxel-carboplatin | NSCLC | 47% [ | 15% [ | 23% [ | 38% | 0.09 |
| Nivolumab | Pemetrexed-cisplatin | NSCLC | 47% [ | 32% [ | 23% [ | 55% | − 0.08 |
| Nivolumab | Gemcitabine-cisplatin | NSCLC | 33% [ | 30% [ | 23% [ | 53% | − 0.20 |
| Pembrolizumab | Axitinib | RCC | 73% [ | 19% [ | 25% [ | 44% | 0.29 |
| Pembrolizumab | Lenvatinib | RCC | 67% [ | 19% [ | 25% [ | 44% | 0.23 |
| Nivolumab | Ipilimumab | RCC | 42% [ | 13% [ | 38% [ | 38% | 0.04 |
| Nivolumab | Ipilimumab | Melanoma | 58% [ | 11% [ | 40% [ | 51% | 0.07 |
1The PD-1 monotherapy ORR used in the Bliss calculation corresponds to the available ORR for any of the PD-1s in the corresponding line of therapy, given the increase in ORR seen in earlier lines of therapy. If the ORR is known in the same line of therapy for more than one PD-1, the monotherapy ORR used corresponds to the PD-1 in the combination where possible
2The derived equation for any additional combination contribution is Z = ORR − (Ya + Yb – Ya × Yb). Z can be either positive or negative, depending on whether the Bliss independent prediction is less than or greater than the measured ORR for a combination