| Literature DB >> 34893775 |
Thomas Powles1, Srikala S Sridhar2, Yohann Loriot3, Joaquim Bellmunt4, Xinmeng Jasmine Mu5, Keith A Ching5, Jie Pu6, Cora N Sternberg7, Daniel P Petrylak8, Rosa Tambaro9, Louis M Dourthe10, Carlos Alvarez-Fernandez11, Maureen Aarts12, Alessandra di Pietro13, Petros Grivas14, Craig B Davis15.
Abstract
In a recent phase 3 randomized trial of 700 patients with advanced urothelial cancer (JAVELIN Bladder 100; NCT02603432 ), avelumab/best supportive care (BSC) significantly prolonged overall survival relative to BSC alone as maintenance therapy after first-line chemotherapy. Exploratory biomarker analyses were performed to identify biological pathways that might affect survival benefit. Tumor molecular profiling by immunohistochemistry, whole-exome sequencing and whole-transcriptome sequencing revealed that avelumab survival benefit was positively associated with PD-L1 expression by tumor cells, tumor mutational burden, APOBEC mutation signatures, expression of genes underlying innate and adaptive immune activity and the number of alleles encoding high-affinity variants of activating Fcγ receptors. Pathways connected to tissue growth and angiogenesis might have been associated with reduced survival benefit. Individual biomarkers did not comprehensively identify patients who could benefit from therapy; however, multi-parameter models incorporating genomic alteration, immune responses and tumor growth showed promising predictive utility. These results characterize the complex biologic pathways underlying survival benefit from immune checkpoint inhibition in advanced urothelial cancer and suggest that multiple biomarkers might be needed to identify patients who would benefit from treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34893775 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-021-01579-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440