| Literature DB >> 33870464 |
H M Stege1, M Haist2, S Schultheis2, M I Fleischer2, P Mohr3, S Ugurel4, P Terheyden5, A Thiem6,7, F Kiecker8, U Leiter9, J C Becker4,10, M Meissner11, J Kleeman11, C Pföhler12, J Hassel13, S Grabbe2, C Loquai2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) have led to a prolongation of progression-free and overall survival in patients with metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC). However, immune-mediated adverse events due to ICI therapy are common and often lead to treatment discontinuation. The response duration after cessation of ICI treatment is unknown. Hence, this study aimed to investigate the time to relapse after discontinuation of ICI in MCC patients.Entities:
Keywords: Duration of response; Immune checkpoint inhibitors; Metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma; Rechallenge of immune checkpoint inhibitors; Treatment cessation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33870464 PMCID: PMC8505278 DOI: 10.1007/s00262-021-02925-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Immunol Immunother ISSN: 0340-7004 Impact factor: 6.968
Clinicopathological characteristics of the investigated cohort discontinuing ICI therapy
| Clinicopathological features | |
|---|---|
| 73 (53–97) | |
| Female | 9/20 (45%) |
| Male | 11/20 (55%) |
| Localization | |
| CUP1 | 7/20 (35%) |
| Upper limb | 5/20 (25%) |
| Lower limb | 5/20 (25%) |
| Head–neck area | 2/20 (10%) |
| Trunk | 1/20 (5%) |
| 4/7 (57%)4 | |
| Metastatic sites | |
| Lung | 3/20 (15%) |
| Liver | 4/20 (20%) |
| Nodal | 16/20 (80%) |
| Cutaneous | 9/20 (45%) |
| Cerebral | 0/20 |
| Other (Bone, muscles, pancreas, adrenal glands) | 7/20 (35%) |
| 11/18 (61.1%)5 | |
| 9/20 (45%) | |
| 0/20 | |
| Previous treatments (conventional chemotherapy) | 9/20 (45%) |
| Treatment with Checkpoint-inhibitors (first-line) | |
| Pembrolizumab | 12/20 (60%) |
| Nivolumab | 1/20 (5%) |
| Avelumab | 7/20 (35%) |
| Median treatment duration (range) | 10.0 months (3–27 months) |
| Median response durability (range) | 10.0 months (1–24 months) |
| Treatment-related adverse events | 9/20 (45%) |
| Initiation of immunosuppressive treatment | 4/20 (20%) |
| Discontinuation of ICI-treatment | 7/20 (35%) |
| Progress after ICI discontinuation | 12/20 (60%) |
| Rechallenge of ICI | 8/12 (66.7%) |
| Median time interval between ICI discontinuation and re-induction (range) | 7.0 months (1–20 months) |
| Median response durability upon ICI rechallenge (range) | 6.0 months (1–18 months) |
| Median follow-up period upon ICI discontinuation | 13.2 months |
| Overall observation period, median (range) | 20.5 months (4–37 months) |
| Deceased | 5/20 (25%) |
1CUP cancer of unknown primary, 2MCPyV Merkel cell polyomavirus, 3ECOG Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; Percentages based on the total number of patients with known MCPyV and LDH-serum levels
Fig. 1Median progression free survival in patients with advanced MCC. The Kaplan–Meier plot illustrates the median response durability after cessation of ICI therapy (dashed line; median: 10.0 months) and the corresponding 95% confidence interval (gray overlay) of the entire cohort (n = 20)
Fig. 2Swimmer’s plot for the patient cohort investigated in the retrospective analysis. Six patients achieved an initial CR to ICI treatment (green bars), 11 patients showed a partial response to ICI therapy (blue bars) and 3 patients showed a stable disease upon ICI treatment (orange bars). After ICI discontinuation we observed disease progression in 12 patients, whereas 8 patients retained an ongoing response
Best overall response and outcome for patients who discontinued ICI treatment
| Best overall Response | Number of patients | Patients diagnosed with PD | Mean time of anti-PD-1 treatment | Mean time of response durability after discontinuation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| months (range) | months (range) | |||
| Complete response | 6 (30%) | 2 (33%) | 9.3 months (range 3–27) | 11.5 months (1–20) |
| Partial response | 11 (55%) | 7 (66%) | 10.4 months (range 5–16) | 11.2 months (range 1–24) |
| Stable disease | 3 (15%) | 3 (100%) | 10 months (range 6–12) | 7 months (range 5–10) |
ICI, immune checkpoint inhibitors; PD, progressive disease; PD-1, programmed cell death protein 1
Fig. 3Kaplan–Meier plot illustrating the progression-free survival for the 3 subcohorts of patients showing a different initial response to ICI therapy. It can be found that patients with a SD as BOR (red line) after initiation of ICI therapy have the shortest median PFS (6.0 months) in comparison with those patients showing a PR (green line, median PFS 12.0 months) or a complete response (blue line, median PFS not reached)
Fig. 4Graphical summary for the number of cases showing tumor progression after termination of ICI-therapy and best response to anti-PD-1/anti-PD-L1 treatment. It can be demonstrated that patients with a strong initial response to anti-PD-1/anti-PD-L1 treatment are more likely to obtain a durable anti-tumor immune response. No progress of metastatic MCC could be found in 36% and 66% of patients, which have shown a partial response or complete response upon ICI treatment. By contrast, disease progression upon treatment cessation was observed among all patients (100%) which had initially shown a stable disease upon ICI treatment. The correlation between the risk of disease progression and the initial BOR was, however, found to be below statistical significance (Fisher´s exact test, p = 0.164)
Fig. 5Potential correlation between the response durability and the best response to ICI treatment. It could be demonstrated that the initial response to ICI treatment impacts the long-term response durability (SD: 7 months vs. PR: 11.2 months vs. CR: 11.5 months), albeit this correlation was below statistical significance as analyzed by Kruskal–Wallis rank sum Test (p = 0.661)
Fig. 6Bar chart illustrating the response to anti-PD-1/anti-PD-L1 re-challange after previous treatment cessation and the best overall response to an initial ICI therapy. Patients with a stronger initial response to ICI therapy are at lower risk of disease progression upon ICI-rechallenge. In particular, it could be found that patients with a CR to initial ICI therapy subsequently achieved at least a partial response upon ICI rechallenge. By contrast, all patients initially showing a SD to ICI therapy progressed upon ICI rechallenge. Patients with an initial PR to ICI therapy showed a heterogeneous outcome after re-induction of ICI therapy (2/5 obtained a response, whereas 3 progressed after re-induction of ICI therapy)