| Literature DB >> 32630154 |
Daniele Lavacchi1, Elisa Pellegrini1, Valeria Emma Palmieri1, Laura Doni1, Marinella Micol Mela1, Fabrizio Di Maida1, Amedeo Amedei2, Serena Pillozzi1, Marco Carini1,2, Lorenzo Antonuzzo1,2.
Abstract
Systemic treatment of renal cancer (RCC) has undergone remarkable changes over the past 20 years with the introduction of immunotherapeutic agents targeting programmed cell death (PD-1)/programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) axis, as a single-agent or combined with anti-CTLA-4 monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) or a multi-target vascular endothelial growth factor-(VEGF) tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI). In this paper, we review the main evidence on the use of Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors (ICIs) for RCC treatment from the first demonstration of activity of a nivolumab single agent in a phase I trial to the novel combination strategies (anti-PD-1 plus anti-CTLA4 or anti-PD-1 plus TKI). In addition, we discuss the use of anti-PD-1/PD-L1 agents in patients with non-clear cells and rare histological subtype RCC. Then, we critically examine the current findings in biomarkers that have been proposed to be prognostic or predictive to the response of immunotherapy including immune gene expression signature, B7-H1 expression, PBRM1 loss of function, PD-L1 expression, frame shift indel count, mutations in bromodomain-containing genes in patients with MiT family translocation RCC (tRCC), high expression of the T-effector gene signature, and a high myeloid inflammation gene expression pattern. To date, a single biomarker as a predictor of response has not been established. Since the dynamic behavior of the immune response and the different impact of ICI treatment on patients with specific RCC subtypes, the integration of multiple biomarkers and further validation in clinical trials are needed.Entities:
Keywords: immune checkpoint inhibitors; predictive biomarkers; renal cell carcinoma; tyrosine kinase inhibitors
Mesh:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32630154 PMCID: PMC7369721 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21134691
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Summary of the main phase II and III trials of anti-PD-1/PD-L1 MoAb single agent.
| Trial | Phase | Treatment Setting | Arms | Number of Patients | Risk Groups (%) | Previous Nephrectomy (%) | Primary End-Point | ORR (%) | DCR (%) | PFS (Months) | OS (Months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT0135443/ | II | at least 2nd line in mRCC with a clear-cell component after previous antiangiogenic therapy | Nivolumab 0.3 mg/kg, 2 mg/kg, or 10 mg/kg IV every 3 weeks | 168 | MSKCC risk group: Favorable 33%, Intermediate 42%, Poor 25% | 98% of patients received prior surgery (type of surgery not specified) | PFS | 20%, 22%, and 20% in each arm respectively | NR | 2.7, 4.0, and 4.2 months in each arm respectively | 18.2, 25.5 and 24.7 months in each arm respectively |
| NCT01668784/ | III | at least 2nd line in advanced or mRCC with a clear-cell component and previous treatment with one or two antiangiogenic therapies | Nivolumab 3 mg/kg IV every 2 weeks vs. everolimus daily oral dose of 10 mg | 821 | MSKCC risk group: Favorable 36%, Intermediate 49%, Poor 15% | 88% of patients received prior nephrectomy | OS | 25% with nivolumab and 5% with everolimus | NR | 4.6 months with nivolumab and 4.4 months with everolimus | 25.0 vs. 19.6 |
| NCT03126331/ | II | mRCC of any histology (clear cell 93%, papillary 7%) who received at least one prior anti-angiogenic therapy | Single-arm: nivolumab for 12 w (240 mg every 2 w or 480 mg every 4 w), patients with ≥10% reduction in tumor burden entered a treatment-free observation phase | 14 | IMDC risk group: Favorable 7%, Intermediate 86%, Poor 7% | 100% of patients had a prior nephrectomy | feasibility of intermittent nivolumab (≥80% of patients eligible for intermittent therapy elect to receive intermittent nivolumab) | 29% | NR | 7.97 months | NR |
Abbreviations: MoAb: monoclonal antibody; NR: not reported; w = week.
AEs in the main phase II and III trials of anti-PD-1/PD-L1 MoAb single agents.
| Trial | G3–4 AEs (%) | Most Commonly Reported G3–4 AEs | Discontinuation Rate Due to Treatment-Related AEs (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01354431/ | 11% | Transaminases increased | 7% |
| NCT01668784/CheckMate 025 | 19% with nivolumab 37% with everolimus | fatigue (3%), anemia (2%), pneumonitis (2%) with nivolumab; anemia (8%), hypertriglyceridemia (5%), hyperglycemia (4%), stomatitis (4%) with everolimus | 8% with nivolumab, 13% with everolimus |
Abbreviations: AE: adverse event; G: grade; MoAb: monoclonal antibody.
Summary of the main phase II and III trials of anti-PD-1/PD-L1 MoAbs in combination with other agents.
| Trial | Phase | Treatment Setting | Arms | Number of Patients | Previous Nephrectomy (%) | Primary End-Points | ORR (%) | DCR(%) | PFS (Months) | OS (Months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Checkmate 214 | 3 | First line | Intermediate and poor risk: nivolumab + ipilimumab vs. sunitinib | 1096 | 82% vs. 80% | OS, ORR, PFS | 42% vs. 27% | 72% vs. 71% | 11.6 vs. 8.4 | NR vs. 26 |
| KEYNOTE-426 | 3 | First-line | Pembrolizumab + axitinib vs. sunitinib | 861 | 82.6 vs. 83.4 | OS, PFS | 59.3 vs. 35.7 | 83.3 vs. 75.1 | 15.1 vs. 11.1 | NR |
| JAVELIN Renal 101 | 3 | First-line | Avelumab + axitinib vs. sunitinib | 886 | 86.3 vs. 86.9 | OS and PFS in PDL1 < 1% | 55.2% vs. 25.5% | 13.8 vs. 7.2 | NR | |
| IMmotion151 | 3 | First-line | Atezolizumab + bevacizumab vs. sunitninb | 915 (454 + 461) | 84% vs. 83% in PDL1+ | PFS in PDL1+ and OS in ITT | 43% vs. 34% in PDL1+ 36% vs. 32% in ITT | 75% vs. 69% in PDL1+ 75% vs. 72% in ITT | 11.2 vs. 7.7 in PDL1+ | NR |
Abbreviations: MoAb: monoclonal antibody; NR: not reported.
AEs in the main phase II and III trials of anti-PD-1/PD-L1 MoAb in combination with other agents.
| Trial | G3–4 AEs (%) | Most Commonly Reported G3–4 AEs | Discontinuation Rate Due to Treatment-Related AEs (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 43 vs. 63 | - increased lipase level, fatigue diarrhea | 22 vs. 12 |
|
| 75.8 vs. 70.6 | - Diarrhea, hypertension and hepatic toxicity | both drugs: 30.5, |
|
| 71.2 vs. 71.5 | - hypertension, diarrhea, increased alanine aminotransferase level, palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia | 7.6 vs. 13.4 |
|
| 40 vs. 54 | - hypertension, | 5 vs. 8 |
Abbreviations: AE: adverse event; G: grade; MoAb: monoclonal antibody.
Summary of the main prognostic and predictive biomarkers for immunotherapy in RCC.
| Biomarker | Clinical Significance | References |
|---|---|---|
|
| Better PFS among patients treated with axitinib plus avelumab | [ |
|
| Negative prognostic factor for 5-year PFS and 5-year cancer-specific survival rate: | [ |
|
| Better clinical benefit among patients who received nivolumab with or without ipilimumab. | [ |
|
| Negative prognostic factor. | [ |
|
| Positive predictive factor in patients treated with anti-PD-1 agents. | [ |
|
| Better PFS and ORR among patients treated with atezolizumab plus bevacizumab. | [ |
|
| Negative prognostic factor for PFS in patients treated with atezolizumab single-agent or atezolizumab combined with bevacizumab | [ |
|
| Long-lasting clinical benefit in two patients with tRCC treated with ICIs. | [ |
Abbreviations: ICI: immune checkpoint inhibitor; ORR: overall response rate; OS: overall survival; PD-L1: programmed death-ligand 1; PD-1: Programmed cell death-1; PFS: progression-free survival; tRCC: translocation renal cell carcinoma.