| Literature DB >> 31151303 |
Maxime Frelaut1, Christophe Le Tourneau2,3,4, Edith Borcoman5.
Abstract
Immunotherapy is now widely prescribed in oncology, leading to the observation of new types of responses, including rapid disease progression sometimes reported as hyperprogression. However, only a few studies have assessed the question of hyperprogression and there is no consensual definition of this phenomenon. We reviewed existing data on hyperprogression in published studies, focusing on reported definitions, predictive factors, and potential biological mechanisms. Seven studies retrospectively assessed hyperprogression incidence, using various definitions, some based on the tumoral burden variation across time with repeated computed-tomography (CT) scan, others based on an association of radiological and clinical criteria. Reported hyperprogression incidence varied between 4% and 29% of all responses, mostly in multi-tumor cohorts and with patients receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors. Hyperprogression correlated with worse chances of survival than standard progression in two studies. However, no strong predictive factors of hyperprogression were identified, and none were consistent across studies. In total, hyperprogression is a frequent pattern of response under immunotherapy, with a strong impact on patient outcome. There is a need for a consensual definition of hyperprogression. Immunotherapy should be stopped early in cases where there is suspicion of hyperprogression.Entities:
Keywords: hyperprogression; immunotherapy; new patterns of response; pseudoprogression; treatment beyond progression
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31151303 PMCID: PMC6600249 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20112674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Examples of new patterns of response and progression with immunotherapy.
Figure 2Illustration of hyperprogression under immunotherapy. A 53-year-old female patient with metastatic (lung) submandibular gland epidermoid carcinoma was treated in third line with weekly Methotrexate. After 4 months, patient experienced disease progression with appearance of lung, hepatic, and bone metastases. As fourth line, she received Nivolumab, an anti-PD-1 inhibitor. After 4 injections, she presented with major dyspnea with massive disease progression on computed-tomography (CT) scan. She died 64 days after immunotherapy initiation.
Rates of hyperprogression in patients receiving immune checkpoints inhibitors.
| Study Drugs | Cancer Type | Definition of Hyperprogression | Number of Patients | Rates | Predictive Factors Identified | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors (phase 1 trials) | All cancer | RECIST progression | 131 | 9% | Age > 65 years old | [ |
| PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors | NSCLC | RECIST progression | 406 | 13.8% | >2 metastatic sites | [ |
| ICI and/or costimulatory molecules (phase 1 trials) | All cancer | RECIST progression | 182 | 7% | Female gender | [ |
| PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors | HNSCC | ≥2-fold increase TGK | 34 | 29% | Regional recurrence in the irradiated field | [ |
| ICI | NSCLC | RECIST progression | 152 | 25.7% | Density of myeloperoxidase myeloid cells within the tumor | [ |
| ICI or costimulatory molecules | All cancer | TTF < 2 months | 155 | 4% | [ | |
| ICI | All cancer | TTF < 2 months | 214 | 15% | [ |
HNSCC, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; ICI, immune checkpoint inhibitor; irRECIST, immune-related response-evaluation criteria in solid tumors; NSCLC, non-small-cell lung cancer; RECIST, response-evaluation criteria in solid tumors; TGK, tumor growth kinetics; TGR, tumor growth rate; TTF, time to treatment failure.
Figure 3Definition of hyperprogression by Champiat et al. based on TGR variation. Comparison between pre-immunotherapy TGR (preTGR), computed with the anterior and baseline CT scan, and immunotherapy TGR (postTGR), computed with baseline CT scan and first evaluation during immunotherapy. Champiat defined hyperprogression as a RECIST progression at the first evaluation and at least two-fold TGR increase between pre-immunotherapy and immunotherapy period [14].
Overview of immune-specific related response criteria reported in the literature.
| RECIST 1.1 [ | irRC [ | irRECIST [ | iRECIST [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Unidimensional | Bidimensional | Unidimensional | Unidimensional |
|
| ≥10 mm | 5 × 5 mm | ≥10 mm | ≥10 mm |
|
| 5 total, 2 per organ | 10 total, 5 per organ | 5 total, 2 per organ | 5 total, 2 per organ |
|
| Disappearance of all lesions | Disappearance of all lesions | Disappearance of all lesions | Disappearance of all lesions |
|
| ≥30% decrease from baseline | ≥50% decrease from baseline | ≥30% decrease from baseline | ≥30% decrease from baseline |
|
| Neither PR or PD | Neither PR or PD | Neither PR or PD | Neither PR or PD |
|
| ≥20% increase from nadir (≥5 mm) | ≥25% increase from nadir | ≥20% increase from nadir (≥5 mm) | ≥20% increase from nadir (≥5 mm) |
|
| Not applicable | At least 4 weeks after | At least 4 weeks after and up to 12 weeks | At least 4 weeks after and up to 8 weeks |
|
| Always PD | Incorporate in the sum of measurement | Incorporate in the sum of measurement | Unconfirmed progressive disease, not included in the sum of measurement |
RECIST, response-evaluation criteria in solid tumors; irRC, immune-related response criteria; irRECIST, immune-related RECIST; iRECIST, immune RECIST; CR, complete response; PR, partial response; SD, stable disease; PD, progressive disease.
Figure 4Management of radiological progression and clinical aggravation under immunotherapy.