| Literature DB >> 34200267 |
Alessandra Raimondi1, Federica Palermo1, Michele Prisciandaro1, Massimo Aglietta2, Lorenzo Antonuzzo3,4, Giuseppe Aprile5, Rossana Berardi6, Giovanni G Cardellino7, Giovanni De Manzoni8, Ferdinando De Vita9, Massimo Di Maio10, Lorenzo Fornaro11, Giovanni L Frassineti12, Cristina Granetto13, Francesco Iachetta14, Sara Lonardi15, Roberto Murialdo16, Elena Ongaro17, Francesca Pucci18, Margherita Ratti19, Nicola Silvestris20,21, Valeria Smiroldo22, Andrea Spallanzani23, Antonia Strippoli24, Stefano Tamberi25, Emiliano Tamburini26, Alberto Zaniboni27, Maria Di Bartolomeo1, Chiara Cremolini28, Carlo Sposito29, Vincenzo Mazzaferro29, Filippo Pietrantonio1.
Abstract
In resectable gastric or gastroesophageal junction cancer (GC/GEJC), the powerful positive prognostic effect and the potential predictive value for a lack of benefit from the combination of adjuvant/peri-operative chemotherapy for the MSI-high status was demonstrated. Given the high sensitivity of MSI-high tumors for immunotherapy, exploratory trials showed that combination immunotherapy induces a high rate of complete pathological response (pCR), potentially achieving cancer cure without surgery. INFINITY is an ongoing phase II, multicentre, single-arm, multi-cohort trial investigating the activity and safety of tremelimumab and durvalumab as neoadjuvant (Cohort 1) or potentially definitive (Cohort 2) treatment for MSI-high/dMMR/EBV-negative, resectable GC/GEJC. About 310 patients will be pre-screened, to enroll a total of 31 patients, 18 and 13 in Cohort 1 and 2, at 25 Italian Centres. The primary endpoint of Cohort 1 is rate of pCR (ypT0N0) and negative ctDNA after neoadjuvant immunotherapy, of Cohort 2 is 2-year complete response rate, defined as absence of macroscopic or microscopic residual disease (locally/regionally/distantly) at radiological examinations, tissue and liquid biopsy, during non-operative management without salvage gastrectomy. The ongoing INFINITY proof-of-concept study may provide evidence on immunotherapy and the potential omission of surgery in localized/locally advanced GC/GEJC patients selected for dMMR/MSI-high status eligible for radical resection.Entities:
Keywords: CTLA4; PD-L1; gastric cancer; microsatellite instability; non-operative management; pre-operative treatment
Year: 2021 PMID: 34200267 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13112839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639