| Literature DB >> 31315610 |
Zhi Ji1, Zhi Peng1, Jifang Gong1, Xiaotian Zhang1, Jian Li1, Ming Lu1, Zhihao Lu1, Lin Shen2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) were approved to have a significant antitumor activity in various tumor types. In practice, some patients do not seem to benefit from ICIs but rather to have accelerating disease. The aim of this study was to evaluate hyperprogression in patients with malignant tumors of digestive system treated with ICIs.Entities:
Keywords: Digestive system; Hyperprogression; Immunotherapy; Tumor growth kinetics (TGK); irRECIST
Year: 2019 PMID: 31315610 PMCID: PMC6637510 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-019-5921-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Flowchart of study selection process
Patient characteristics
| All patients ( | TGKR<2 ( | TGKR≥2 ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 17 (68%) | 14 (70%) | 3 (60%) | 1.000 |
| Female | 8 (32%) | 6 (30%) | 2 (40%) | |
| Age | 54 (22–77) | 52 (22–77) | 63 (31–65) | 0.587 |
| EGOG | ||||
| 0 | 14 (56%) | 10 (50%) | 4 (80%) | 0.341 |
| 1 | 11 (44%) | 10 (50%) | 1 (20%) | |
| Location | ||||
| stomach | 8 (32%) | 6 (30%) | 2 (40%) | 1.000 |
| esophagus | 7 (28%) | 6 (30%) | 1 (20%) | |
| colorectal | 7 (28%) | 5 (25%) | 2 (40%) | |
| liver | 1 (4%) | 1 (5%) | 0 | |
| ancreas | 1 (4%) | 1 (5%) | 0 | |
| ampulla | 1 (4%) | 1 (5%) | 0 | |
| Histology | ||||
| adenocarcinoma | 14 (56%) | 12 (60%) | 2 (40%) | 0.032 |
| squamous carcinoma | 6 (24%) | 6 (30%) | 0 | |
| neuroendocrine carcinoma | 4 (16%) | 1 (5%) | 3 (60%) | |
| hepatocellular carcinoma | 1 (4%) | 1 (5%) | 0 | |
| Metastatic site | ||||
| ≤2 | 16 (64%) | 13 (65%) | 3 (60%) | 0.749 |
| >2 | 9 (36%) | 7 (35%) | 2 (40%) | |
| Type of immunotherapy | ||||
| PD-1 inhibitor | 6 (24%) | 6 (30%) | 0 | 0.447 |
| PD-L1 inhibitor | 16 (64%) | 12 (60%) | 4 (80%) | |
| PD-L1 + CTLA-4 inhibitor | 3 (12%) | 2 (10%) | 1 (20%) | |
| MMR | ||||
| pMMR | 6 (40%) | 4 (33%) | 2 (66.7%) | 0.525 |
| dMMR | 9 (60%) | 8 (67%) | 1 (33.3%) | |
| PD-L1 | ||||
| positive | 6 (42%) | 5 (46%) | 1 (50%) | 1.000 |
| negative | 7 (54%) | 6 (55%) | 1 (50%) | |
PD-L1 positive meant combined positive score ≥ 1% and PD-L1 negative meant combined positive score < 1%. Abbreviation: MMR mismatch repair, pMMR mismatch repair proficient, dMMR mismatch repair deficient
Fig. 2Pairwise comparisons of TGK on immunotherapy (TGKPOST) and TGK pre-immunotherapy (TGKPRE) in 25 patients with malignant tumors of digestive system enrolled and treated in phase I clinical trials with ICIs. Each dot represents a patient
Fig. 3Serial imaging before and after immunotherapy in the five hyperprogressors. Pre-baseline imaging refers to images about 2 months before immunotherapy. Baseline imaging refers to imaging immediately before immunotherapy. a, Case #1: patient with right colon signet-ring cell carcinoma. Restaging imaging done 1.2 months after starting atezolizumab showed multiple new metastases including right breast, bilateral ovaries et al. (863% increase from baseline imaging). Patient died 3.6 months from starting atezolizumab. b, Case #2: patient with gastric adenocarcinoma. The first evaluation done 1.4 months after the initiation of atezolizumab revealed a rapid progression of liver masses as well as new liver metastasis (107% increase from baseline imaging). Patient subsequently received liver interventional therapy and died 7.4 months from the initiation of atezolizumab. c, Case #3: patient with colon NEC. After two cycle’s atezolizumab therapy, patient presented severe abdominal distension, scans (0.94 months post atezolizumab) showed rapid progression of the peritoneum and liver metastases and new brain and adrenal gland metastases (139% increase from baseline imaging). Patient died 2.1 months from starting atezolizumab. d, Case #4: patient with gastric NEC. CT scans (1.4 months post atezolizumab) revealed a 44% increase in the liver mass and died 5.6 months from the initiation of atezolizumab. e, Case #5: patient with esophagus NEC. Patient had an incomplete bowel obstruction after immunotherapy and scans (1.2 months post durvalumab and tremelimumab) showed new lung, liver, T10–12 and L2–4 metastases (538% increase from baseline imaging). He died 3.8 months from starting durvalumab and tremelimumab
Fig. 4Variation of the tumor burden in the five hyperprogressors. Tumor burden is compared from about 2 months before immunotherapy (pre-baseline) to image immediately before immunotherapy (baseline), and then to first imaging after immunotherapy (post-baseline). Tumor burden was evaluated with irRECIST
The related parameters of hyperprogression according to different researchers
| Champiat et al. [ | Kato et al. [ | Saada-Bouzid et al. [ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Evaluation criteria | RECIST 1.1 | irRC | RECIST 1.1 irRECIST |
| Tumor growth dynamics indicator | TGR | PP | TGK |
| Specific formula | TG = 3Log(ST /S0) /(T-T0) TGR = 100(TG-1) | PP = (ST -S0) /S0 | TGK = (ST -S0) /(T-T0) |
| Definition of hyperprogression | PD TGRPOST /TGRPRE ≥ 2 | TTF < 2 months SPOST /SPRE ≥ 150% PPPOST /PPPRE > 2 | TGKPOST /TGKPRE ≥ 2 |
T and T0 stand for two time points respectively. ST and S0 stand for the sum of tumor burden at T and T0 respectively. TGRPRE stands for the TGR calculated between pre-baseline and baseline, TGRPOST stands for the TGR calculated between baseline and first evaluation imaging. And the other subscripts of “PRE” and “POST” have the similar meanings. Abbreviation: TGR, tumor growth rate; PP, progression pace; TGK, tumor growth kinetics; PD, progressed disease; TTF, time to treatment failure