| Literature DB >> 34764195 |
Kenneth F Grossmann1, Megan Othus2, Sapna P Patel3, Ahmad A Tarhini4, Vernon K Sondak4, Michael V Knopp5, Teresa M Petrella6, Thach-Giao Truong7, Nikhil I Khushalani4, Justine V Cohen8, Elizabeth I Buchbinder9, Kari Kendra5, Pauline Funchain10, Karl D Lewis11, Robert M Conry12, Bartosz Chmielowski13, Ragini R Kudchadkar14, Douglas B Johnson15, Hongli Li2, James Moon2, Zeynep Eroglu4, Brian Gastman10, Magdalena Kovacsovics-Bankowski1, Krishna S Gunturu16, Scot W Ebbinghaus17, Sama Ahsan17, Nageatte Ibrahim17, Elad Sharon18, Larissa A Korde18, John M Kirkwood19, Antoni Ribas13.
Abstract
We conducted a randomized phase III trial to evaluate whether adjuvant pembrolizumab for one year (647 patients) improved recurrence-free survival (RFS) or overall survival (OS) in comparison with high-dose IFNα-2b for one year or ipilimumab for up to three years (654 patients), the approved standard-of-care adjuvant immunotherapies at the time of enrollment for patients with high-risk resected melanoma. At a median follow-up of 47.5 months, pembrolizumab was associated with significantly longer RFS than prior standard-of-care adjuvant immunotherapies [HR, 0.77; 99.62% confidence interval (CI), 0.59-0.99; P = 0.002]. There was no statistically significant association with OS among all patients (HR, 0.82; 96.3% CI, 0.61-1.09; P = 0.15). Proportions of treatment-related adverse events of grades 3 to 5 were 19.5% with pembrolizumab, 71.2% with IFNα-2b, and 49.2% with ipilimumab. Therefore, adjuvant pembrolizumab significantly improved RFS but not OS compared with the prior standard-of-care immunotherapies for patients with high-risk resected melanoma. SIGNIFICANCE: Adjuvant PD-1 blockade therapy decreases the rates of recurrence, but not survival, in patients with surgically resectable melanoma, substituting the prior standard-of-care immunotherapies for this cancer. See related commentary by Smithy and Shoushtari, p. 599. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 587. ©2021 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 34764195 PMCID: PMC8904282 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-21-1141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 38.272