| Literature DB >> 35055006 |
Davide Ciardiello1,2, Brigida Anna Maiorano1,3, Paola Parente4, Maria Grazia Rodriquenz1, Tiziana Pia Latiano1, Cinzia Chiarazzo1, Valerio Pazienza5, Luigi Pio Guerrera1,2, Brunella Amoruso1,6, Nicola Normanno7, Giulia Martini2, Fortunato Ciardiello2, Erika Martinelli2, Evaristo Maiello1.
Abstract
Biliary tract cancers (BTC) represent a heterogeneous and aggressive group of tumors with dismal prognosis. For a long time, BTC has been considered an orphan disease with very limited therapeutic options. In recent years a better understanding of the complex molecular landscape of biology is rapidly changing the therapeutic armamentarium. However, while 40-50% of patients there are molecular drivers susceptible to target therapy, for the remaining population new therapeutic options represent an unsatisfied clinical need. The role of immunotherapy in the continuum of treatment of patients with BTC is still debated. Despite initial signs of antitumor-activity, single-agent immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) demonstrated limited efficacy in an unselected population. Therefore, identifying the best partner to combine ICIs and predictive biomarkers represents a key challenge to optimize the efficacy of immunotherapy. This review provides a critical analysis of completed trials, with an eye on future perspectives and possible biomarkers of response.Entities:
Keywords: biliary tract cancer; immunotherapy; precision medicine; target therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35055006 PMCID: PMC8775359 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23020820
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Molecular landscape of biliary tract cancer (BTC). Oncogenic alterations are found in approximately half of the patients diagnosed with biliary tract cancer. So far, only half of the pathways are targetable, with specific inhibitors tested in clinical trials: isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH)-1, fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR)-2, HER-2, BRAF, NTRK. Moreover, patients with microsatellite instable tumors (MSI-H) are prone to respond to immunotherapy. Therefore, for most patients, chemotherapy remains the standard of care; immunotherapy (as single agent or combination) is under investigation.
Completed clinical trials assessing the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) for the treatment of biliary tract cancer.
| Study Name | Agent | Target | Phase | Patients | Setting | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti PD-1/PD-L1 monotherapy | ||||||
| NCT02829918 | Nivolumab | PD-1 | 2 | 54 | Second line and subsequent | mPFS 3.68 months |
| JapicCTI-153098 | Nivolumab | PD-1 | 1 | 30 | Second line and subsequent | mPFS 1.4 months |
| KEYNOTE-028 | Pembrolizumab | PD-1 | 1b | 24 | Pretreated | mPFS 1.8 months |
| KEYNOTE-158 | Pembrolizumab | PD-1 | 2 | 104 | Second line and subsequent | mPFS 2 months |
| NCT01938612 | Durvalumab | PD-L1 | 1 | 42 | Second line and subsequent | mPFS 2 months |
| Anti PD-1/PD-L1 combination with CTLA4 inhibitors | ||||||
| CA209-538 | Nivolumab | PD-1 | 2 | 39 | Second line and subsequent | mPFS 2.9 months |
| NCT01938612 | Durvalumab | PD-L1 | 2 | 65 | Second line and subsequent | mOS 10.1 months |
| Dual PD-L1 and TGFβ blockade | ||||||
| NCT02699514 | Bintrafusp alfa | PD-L1 | 1 | 30 | Second line and subsequent | mPFS 2.5 months |
| NCT03833661 | Bintrafusp alfa | PD-L1 | 2 | 159 | Second line and subsequent | ORR 10.1% |
| ICIs plus chemotherapy | ||||||
| JapicCTI-153098 | Nivolumab | PD-1 | 2 | 30 | First line | mPFS 4.2 months |
| NCT03311789 | Nivolumab | PD-1 | 2 | 30 | First line | mPFS6.1 months |
| NCT03486678 | Camrelizumab | PD-1 | 2 | 37 | First line | mPFS 6.1 months |
| NCT03092895 | Camrelizumab | PD-1 | 2 | 92 | First line | mPFS 5.3 months |
| NCT03046862 | Durvalumab | PD-L1 | 2 | 30 | First line | mPFS 13 months |
| NCT03046862 | Durvalumab | PD-L1 | 2 | 45 | First line | mPFS 11 months |
| NCT03046862 | Durvalumab | PD-L1 | 2 | 46 | First line | mPFS11.9 months |
| NCT03796429 | Toripalimab | PD-1 | 2 | 39 | First line | mPFS 7 months |
| Other combinatory strategy | ||||||
| NCT02443324 | Ramucirumab | VEGFR2 | 1 | 26 | Second line and subsequent | mPFS 1.6 months |
| NCT03892577 | Pembrolizumab or Nivolumab | PD-1 | 1 | 56 | Second line and subsequent | mPFS 5 months |
| NCT03482102 | Durvalumab | PD-L1 | 1 | 15 | Second line and subsequent | ORR 25% |
PD-1: programmed death 1; PD-L1: programmed death ligand 1; CTLA-4: cytotoxic T-lynmphocyte-associated antigen 4; mPFS: median progression free survival; mOS: median overall survival; ORR: overall response rate; TGFβ-RII: transforming growth factor beta receptor 2; VEGFR2. Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2.
On-going clinical trials.
| Study Name | Agent | Target | Phase | Setting | Number | Primary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICIs plus chemotherapy | ||||||
| NCT03260712 | cisplatin/gemcitabine + | PD-1 | II | 1 line | 50 | PFS rate at 6 months |
| NCT04003636 | cisplatin/gemcitabine + | PD-1 | III | 1 line | 788 | OS |
| NCT03875235 | cisplatin/gemcitabine + durvalumab | PD-L1 | III | 1 line | 757 | OS |
| NCT03478488 | KN035 plus gemcitabine/ | PD-L1 | III | 1 line | 480 | OS |
| NCT04172402 | Nivolumab + S-1 + gemcitabine | PD-1 | II | 1 line | 48 | ORR |
| NCT04027764 | Toripalimab + S-1 + nab-paclitaxel | PD-1 | II | 1 line | 30 | ORR |
| NCT03796429 | Toripalimab + S-1 + gemcitabine | PD-1 | II | 1 line | 40 | PFS |
| NCT04191343 | Toripalimab + gemcitabine + | PD-1 | II | 1 line | 20 | ORR |
| NCT03785873 | Naliri + nivolumab | PD-1 | Ib/II | 2 line or later | 34 | Tolerability |
| ICIs plus tyrosine kinase inhibitor | ||||||
| NCT03797326 | Pembrolizumab + lenvatinib | PD-1 | II multicohort | Pretreated solid tumors including BTC | 590 | ORR |
| NCT04211168 | Toripalimab + lenvatinib | PD-1 | II | 2 line or later | 44 | ORR |
| NCT04010071 | Toripalimab + axitinib | PD-1 | II | 2 line or later | 60 | PFS |
| NCT03475953 | Regorafenib + avelumab | PD-L1 | i/II | Pretreated solid tumors including BTC | 482 | Recommended phase 2 dose |
| Other combinatory strategies | ||||||
| NCT04057365 | Nivolumab + DKN-01 | PD-1 | II | 2 line or later | 30 | ORR |
| NCT03201458 | Atezolizumab + cobimetinib | PD-L1 | II | 2 line or later | 76 | PFS |
| NCT03250273 | Nivolumab + etinostat | PD-1 | II | 2 line or later | 44 | ORR |
| NCT04298021 | AZD6738 + durvalumab | PD-1 | II | 2 line or later | 74 | DCR |
| NCT03639935 | Nivolumab + rucaparib | PD-1 | II | 1 line | 35 | PFS rate 4 months |
| NCT03991832 | Durvalumab + olaparib | PD-L1 | II | IDH1 mutated | 78 | ORR |
ICIs: immune checkpoint inhibitors. OS: overall survival; PFS: progression free survival; ORR: overall response rate; DCR: disease control rate. PD-1: programmed death 1; PD-L1: programmed death ligand 1; BTC: biliary tract cancer; TKI: tyrosine kinase inhibitor; AEs: adverse events; MEKi: MEK inhibitor; HDAC: histone deacetylase. ATM: ataxia-telangiectasia mutation. ATR: ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related protein. PARP: poly ADP ribose polymerase. IDH1: isocitrate dehydrogenase.