| Literature DB >> 33558721 |
E P Hoefsmit1, I L M Reijers2, E A Rozeman2, R P M Saw3,4,5, J M Versluis2, O Krijgsman1,6, P Dimitriadis1, K Sikorska7, B A van de Wiel8, H Eriksson9,10, M Gonzalez3, A Torres Acosta7, L G Grijpink-Ongering7, K Shannon3,5, J B A G Haanen2,1, J Stretch3,4,5, S Ch'ng3,4,5, O E Nieweg3,4,5, H A Mallo2, S Adriaansz2, R M Kerkhoven11, S Cornelissen12, A Broeks12, W M C Klop13, C L Zuur13, W J van Houdt13, D S Peeper1,6, A J Spillane3,4,14, A C J van Akkooi13, R A Scolyer3,15, T N M Schumacher1,6, A M Menzies3,16, G V Long3,16, C U Blank17,18.
Abstract
Neoadjuvant ipilimumab plus nivolumab showed high pathologic response rates (pRRs) in patients with macroscopic stage III melanoma in the phase 1b OpACIN ( NCT02437279 ) and phase 2 OpACIN-neo ( NCT02977052 ) studies1,2. While the results are promising, data on the durability of these pathologic responses and baseline biomarkers for response and survival were lacking. After a median follow-up of 4 years, none of the patients with a pathologic response (n = 7/9 patients) in the OpACIN study had relapsed. In OpACIN-neo (n = 86), the 2-year estimated relapse-free survival was 84% for all patients, 97% for patients achieving a pathologic response and 36% for nonresponders (P < 0.001). High tumor mutational burden (TMB) and high interferon-gamma-related gene expression signature score (IFN-γ score) were associated with pathologic response and low risk of relapse; pRR was 100% in patients with high IFN-γ score/high TMB; patients with high IFN-γ score/low TMB or low IFN-γ score/high TMB had pRRs of 91% and 88%; while patients with low IFN-γ score/low TMB had a pRR of only 39%. These data demonstrate long-term benefit in patients with a pathologic response and show the predictive potential of TMB and IFN-γ score. Our findings provide a strong rationale for a randomized phase 3 study comparing neoadjuvant ipilimumab plus nivolumab versus standard adjuvant therapy with antibodies against the programmed cell death protein-1 (anti-PD-1) in macroscopic stage III melanoma.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33558721 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-020-01211-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440