| Literature DB >> 35158786 |
Elias A T Koch1,2, Anne Petzold1,2, Anja Wessely1,2, Edgar Dippel3, Anja Gesierich4, Ralf Gutzmer5, Jessica C Hassel6, Sebastian Haferkamp7, Katharina C Kähler8, Harald Knorr9, Nicole Kreuzberg10, Ulrike Leiter11, Carmen Loquai12, Friedegund Meier13, Markus Meissner14, Peter Mohr15, Claudia Pföhler16, Farnaz Rahimi17, Dirk Schadendorf18,19, Beatrice Schell20, Max Schlaak21, Patrick Terheyden22, Kai-Martin Thoms23, Beatrice Schuler-Thurner1,2, Selma Ugurel18, Jens Ulrich24, Jochen Utikal25, Michael Weichenthal8, Fabian Ziller26, Carola Berking1,2, Markus V Heppt1,2.
Abstract
Re-induction with immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) needs to be considered in many patients with uveal melanoma (UM) due to limited systemic treatment options. Here, we provide hitherto the first analysis of ICB re-induction in UM. A total of 177 patients with metastatic UM treated with ICB were included from German skin cancer centers and the German national skin cancer registry (ADOReg). To investigate the impact of ICB re-induction, two cohorts were compared: patients who received at least one ICB re-induction (cohort A, n = 52) versus those who received only one treatment line of ICB (cohort B, n = 125). In cohort A, a transient benefit of overall survival (OS) was observed at 6 and 12 months after the treatment start of ICB. There was no significant difference in OS between both groups (p = 0.1) with a median OS of 16.2 months (cohort A, 95% CI: 11.1-23.8) versus 9.4 months (cohort B, 95% CI: 6.1-14.9). Patients receiving re-induction of ICB (cohort A) had similar response rates compared to those receiving ICB once. Re-induction of ICB may yield a clinical benefit for a small subgroup of patients even after resistance or development of toxicities.Entities:
Keywords: CTLA-4; PD-1; immune checkpoint blockade; re-induction; toxicity; treatment resistance; uveal melanoma
Year: 2022 PMID: 35158786 PMCID: PMC8833453 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14030518
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Characteristics of the study population. Abbreviations: NA = not available, ICB = immune checkpoint blockade.
| Total | Cohort A | Cohort B | A vs. B | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Women | 89 (50.3%) | 27 (48.1%) | 62 (49.6%) | |
| Men | 88 (49.7%) | 25 (51.9%) | 63 (50.4%) | ||
| Age | Median in years | 66.2 | 64.2 | 67.0 | |
| LDH | Not elevated | 40 (22.6%) | 14 (26.9%) | 26 (20.8%) | |
| Elevated | 90 (50.8%) | 21 (40.4%) | 69 (55.2%) | ||
| NA | 47 (26.6%) | 17 (32.7%) | 30 (24.0%) | ||
| ECOG | ECOG 0 | 84 (47.5%) | 25 (48.1%) | 59 (47.2%) | |
| ECOG 1 | 19 (10.7%) | 4 (7.7%) | 15 (12.0%) | ||
| ECOG 2 | 4 (2.3%) | 1 (1.9%) | 3 (2.4%) | ||
| ECOG 3 | 2 (1.1%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (1.6%) | ||
| ECOG 4 | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | ||
| ECOG 5 | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | ||
| NA | 68 (38.4%) | 22 (42.3%) | 46 (36.8%) | ||
| Number of affected organ systems | Median (range) | 2 (1–8) | 3 (1–7) | 2 (1–8) | |
| Affected organ systems | Liver | 164 (92.7%) | 50 (96.2%) | 114 (91.2%) | |
| Pulmonary | 87 (49.2%) | 27 (51.9%) | 60 (48.0%) | ||
| Bone | 50 (28.2%) | 19 (36.5%) | 31 (24.8%) | ||
| CNS | 23 (13.0%) | 10 (19.2%) | 13 (10.4%) | ||
| Lymph node | 40 (22.6%) | 15 (28.9%) | 25 (20.0%) | ||
| Connective tissue | 9 (5.1%) | 4 (7.7%) | 5 (4.0%) | ||
| Skin | 24 (13.6%) | 12 (23.1%) | 12 (9.6%) | ||
| Disseminated | 10 (5.6%) | 2 (3.8%) | 8 (6.4%) | ||
| Other | 50 (28.2%) | 20 (38.5%) | 30 (24.0%) | ||
| Treatments other than ICB | Chemotherapy | 46 (25.9%) | 28 (53.8%) | 18 (14.4%) | |
| MEK inhibitor | 13 (73.4%) | 4 (7.6%) | 9 (7.2%) | ||
| Sorafenib | 22 (12.4%) | 9 (17.3%) | 13 (10.4%) | ||
| ICB regimen | Any | 177 (100%) | 52 (100.0%) | 125 (100%) | |
| Anti-PD-1 monotherapy (pembrolizumab, nivolumab) | 53 (29.9%) | 18 (34.6%) | 35 (28.0%) | ||
| Anti-CTLA-4 monotherapy (ipilimumab) | 5 (2.8%) | 2 (3.8%) | 3 (2.4%) | ||
| Combined ICB | 119 (67.2%) | 32 (61.5%) | 87 (69.6%) |
Response rates to ICB. Abbreviations: CR = complete response, PR = partial response, SD = stable disease, PD = progressive disease, ORR = objective response rate, DCR = disease control rate. No response data was assessable for 25 patients in total (2 patients in cohort A2 and 23 patients in cohort B). Patients with mixed response are not listed (3 patients of cohort A2, 2 patients of cohort A1, 5 patients of cohort B).
| Total | Cohort A | Cohort B | Test | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICB First Induction (A1) | ICB Re-Induction (A2) | A1 vs. A2 | A1 vs. B | A2 vs. B | |||
| CR | 3/152 = 2.0% | 0/52 = 0.0% | 1/50 = 2.0% | 2/102 = 2.0% | |||
| PR | 14/152 = 9.2% | 4/52 = 7.7% | 4/50 = 8.0% | 10/102 = 9.8% | |||
| SD | 26/152 = 17.1% | 13/52 = 25.0% | 5/50 = 10.0% | 21/102 = 20.6% | |||
| PD | 101/152 = 66.4% | 33/52 = 63.5% | 37/50 = 74.0% | 64/102 = 62.7% | |||
| ORR | 17/152 = 11.2% | 4/52 = 7.7% | 5/50 = 10.0% | 12/102 = 11.8% | |||
| DCR | 43/152 = 28.3% | 18/52 = 34.6% | 10/50 = 20.0% | 33/102 = 32.4% | |||
Response rates to ICB in cohort A. Abbreviations: CR = complete response, PR = partial response, SD = stable disease, PD = progressive disease. Patients with a mixed response and no assessable response data are not listed. Two patients had a mixed response to the first ICB, both showing PD to ICB re-induction, and two patients had a mixed response to ICB re-induction after PD to the first ICB. Additionally, two patients were not assessable for re-induction after PD to the first ICB.
| Response to First ICB Induction | PD to ICB Re-Induction | SD to ICB Re-Induction | PR to ICB Re-Induction | CR to ICB Re-Induction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PD ( | 24 (72.7%) | 3 (9%) | 2 (6%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| SD ( | 9 (69.2%) | 2 (15.3%) | 1 (7.6%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| PR ( | 2 (50%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (25%) | 1 (25%) |
Figure 1Kaplan–Meier estimates of the patient population for (A) OS and (B) PFS to ICB comparing cohort A (re-induction, red) vs. B (ICB one time, turquoise). Although there was no significant difference in OS and PFS (p = 0.1 and p = 0.51, respectively), the median survival differed considerably: cohort A 16.2 months (95%-CI: 11.1–23.8) vs. cohort B 9.4 months (95%-CI: 6.1–14.9). In contrast, the median PFS was equal in both cohorts: cohort A 2.6 months (95%-CI: 2.2–3.1) vs. cohort B 2.5 months (95%-CI 2.0–3.0). OS was not assessable for 5 patients of cohort B, PFS was not assessable for 6 patients of cohort A and 38 patients of cohort B.
Survival probabilities after 6, 12, 18, and 24 month landmarks. Abbreviations: OS = overall survival.
| Time in Months | OS (95% CI) Cohort A | OS (95% CI) Cohort B | Difference (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | 0.806 (0.6997–0.929) | 0.604 (0.516–0.708) | 0.202 (0.139–0.265) |
| 12 | 0.628 (0.4974–0.794) | 0.439 (0.347–0.556) | 0.189 (0.085–0.293) |
| 18 | 0.374 (0.2325–0.601) | 0.317 (0.228–0.440) | 0.057 (−0.087–0.201) |
| 24 | 0.187 (0.0737–0.474) | 0.290 (0.200–0.420) | −0.103 (−0.240–0.033) |
Occurrence of adverse events. Abbreviations: AE = adverse events.
| Total | Cohort A1 | Cohort A2 | Cohort B | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients with any AE | 74/177 (41.8%) | 24/52 (46.2%) | 21/52 (40.4%) | 50/125 (40.0%) | |
| Number of patients with severe AE | 44/177 (24.8%) | 14/52 (26.9%) | 10/52 (19.1%) | 30/125 (24.0%) |
Occurrence of adverse events. Abbreviations: AE = adverse events.
| Toxicity of | Re-Induction after | Re-Induction after | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients with any AE | 6 (20.0%) | 13 (100.0%) | |
| Number of patients with severe AE | 3 (10.0%) | 5 (38.5%) |