Literature DB >> 35158822

Immunotherapy for Esophageal Cancer: State-of-the Art in 2021.

Hugo Teixeira Farinha1, Antonia Digklia2, Dimitrios Schizas3, Nicolas Demartines1, Markus Schäfer1, Styliani Mantziari1.   

Abstract

The management of esophageal cancer (EC) has experienced manifold changes during the last decades. Centralization of EC treatment has been introduced in many countries, subsequently allowing the development of specialized high-volume centers. Minimal invasive surgery has replaced open surgery in many centers, whereas more potent systemic treatments have been introduced in clinical practice. Newer chemotherapy regimens increase long-term survival. Nevertheless, the overall survival of EC patients remains dismal for advanced tumor stages. In this direction, a wide range of targeted biologic agents (immunotherapy) is currently under assessment. Anti- Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor-2 (HER-2) monoclonal antibodies are used in HER2 (+) tumors, predominantly well-differentiated adenocarcinomas, and are currently assessed in the neoadjuvant setting (TRAP, INNOVATION trials). Immune checkpoint inhibitors Nivolumab (ATTRACTION-03) and pembrolizumab (KEYNOTE-181), have demonstrated a survival benefit compared with conventional chemotherapy in heavily pre-treated progressive disease. More recently, CheckMate-577 showed very promising results for nivolumab in a curative adjuvant setting, improving disease-free survival mainly for esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Several ongoing trials are investigating novel targeted agents in the preoperative setting of locally advanced EC. In addition, other immunomodulatory approaches such as peptide vaccines and tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) are currently under development and should be increasingly integrated into clinical practice.

Entities:  

Keywords:  esophageal adenocarcinoma; immunotherapy; oesophageal cancer; squamous cell cancer; tumor microenvironment

Year:  2022        PMID: 35158822      PMCID: PMC8833794          DOI: 10.3390/cancers14030554

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancers (Basel)        ISSN: 2072-6694            Impact factor:   6.639


1. Introduction

1.1. Esophageal Cancer Treatment—Mixing Apples and Oranges

Esophageal cancer (EC) represents the 6th most frequent cancer-related cause of death worldwide, with 500,000 estimated new cases per year with an overall survival rate of 20% in five years [1,2]. The two predominant histological types are esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) and esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC). While ESSC represents more than 85% of all cases of EC worldwide, obesity and uncontrolled gastro–esophageal reflux lead to a significant increase of EAC. Indeed, the latter’s incidence and mortality has surpassed ESSC in several regions of the Western world [3,4,5], where ESCC tends to decrease or stabilize [6]. Although ESCC and EAC are increasingly recognized as two distinct diseases with distinct molecular patterns and risk factors [7], they have been treated similarly for many years [3]. Both are managed by surgical resection in early stages, with neoadjuvant chemo (radio-) therapy followed by surgery for locally advanced stages (cT3 and/or N+, M0) [3]. Following publication of the CROSS and FLOT trial results, a paradigm shift favors preoperative radio-chemotherapy for ESCC and perioperative chemotherapy for EAC [8,9]. However, even if the best available treatment is used, up to 30% of patients will present early recurrence within 12 months of surgery [10]. This is partly explained by the heterogeneity of response to standard (radio)-chemotherapy and the still limited understanding of individual tumor biology, which is not taken into account to adapt treatment options [11].

1.2. Understanding Immunity and Microenvironment of Esophageal Cancer; a Step towards Tailored Treatment

As in many solid tumors, a clear correlation has been observed between EC tumorigenesis and chronic pro-inflammatory conditions (tobacco and alcohol for ESCC, chronic gastroesophageal reflux and obesity for EAC), which induce high mutational rates [12,13]. The immune system is programmed to attack only foreign antigens, while recognizing autologous antigens as inoffensive. This response is coordinated by a balance between stimulatory and inhibitory immune signaling pathways [14], such as cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA-4) and programmed cell death receptor 1 (PD-1) [15]. Cancer cells have the capacity to escape immunologic surveillance by disrupting the tumor microenvironment (TME), which is composed of immune cells, fibroblasts, endothelial cells or perivascular cells, and the extracellular matrix. Disruption of TME balance leads to tumor development by blocking apoptosis, allowing immune evasion and promoting angiogenesis, proliferation, and distant metastases [16]. Immunotherapy is a term used to describe all biologic/targeted agents that aim to increase and restore the immune system’s ability to detect and destroy cancer cells by modifying and/or blocking costimulatory signals [17,18,19,20]. This phenomenon seems to translate to a clinical benefit for patients, with phase II and III trials suggesting improved survival in esophageal and gastric cancer patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibition [4]. Immune checkpoint inhibitors have revolutionized cancer therapy, as a monotherapy or in various combinations; the three approved types are anti-PD-1, anti-PDL1, and anti-CTLA4 monoclonal antibodies [15]. Inhibition of activated CTLA-4, PD-1, and PD-L1 pathways can reverse regulatory T-cell-mediated immunosuppression [21]. Through overexpression of PD-L1 on the cancer cell surface or by inducing PD-L1 expression on the host’s immune cells, tumor cells use the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway to proliferate. When activated, PD-L1 has the ability to exhaust and inhibit host T-cell response that allows the tumor to escape immune surveillance [22]. As such, the PD-1/PD-L1 complex represents an ideal target for immunotherapeutic agents. The combined positive score (CPS) helps quantify the expression of PD-1/PD-L1 antigens and can be used to identify possible responders to anti-PD-1 therapy. A CPS ≥ 10 is considered PD-L1–positive and represents the percentage of PD-L1–expressing tumor and infiltrating immune cells within the total number of tumor cells [23]. Several molecules inhibiting the link between PD-1 and PD-L1 are currently used for the treatment of gastrointestinal tumors and specifically esophageal cancer: anti-PD-1 agents such as nivolumab and pembrolizumab, or anti-PD-L1-agents such as atezolizumab and avelumab [15]. CTLA-4 is a transmembrane protein, a homologue of the CD28 protein, and is expressed exclusively on activated T-cells. When CTLA-4 is bound to proteins, it prevents T cells from destroying other cells [19]. By inducing CTLA-4 upregulation on immune T-cells, cancer cells use the CTLA-4 pathway to escape and promote tumor growth [4,24,25]. Monoclonal antibodies inhibit upregulation of CTLA-4 in gastrointestinal cancer treatment, e.g., ipilimumab and tremelimumab [4]. Recent data have suggested that standard cytotoxic treatment has an impact on immune TME composition, influencing long-term prognosis in some tumors, such as pancreatic, rectal, and even EC [26,27,28,29,30,31]. This is where the role of targeted therapies seems to be most promising.

1.3. Mismatch Repair Protein Deficiency—Microsatellite Instability

Microsatellite instability (MSI) is characterized by a deficiency of DNA-mismatch repair proteins (dMMR), which results in accumulation of replication errors in DNA microsatellites (repeated DNA nucleotide sequences) [32]. The Human Genomic Atlas analysis identified a high prevalence of MSI-high (MSI-h) phenotype in gastric AC (22%), mostly in fundus and gastric body tumors [12]. A recent meta-analysis found that MSI-high gastric AC patients had a superior disease-free and overall survival compared to MSS (microsatellite stable) patients, whereas MSI-h status yielded a significantly worse survival using conventional cytotoxic chemotherapy [33]. However, two recent studies [34,35] report a variable prevalence of MSI-h status in EC, between 0 and 20% for EAC, and 0 and 60% for ESCC [35]. As PD-L1 antagonists are now a potential treatment option for MSI-h patients escaping standard chemotherapy [36,37], identification of these patients early in the course of the disease would be useful to adapt their systemic treatment. As immunotherapy seems to be a promising treatment option for EC patients, a thorough understanding of its current indications and evidence is needed. Up to now, targeted agents have almost exclusively been used in a palliative setting if all other therapeutic options have failed. Its upfront use is only starting to be implemented in clinical practice. The aim of this review was to describe the rationale for immunotherapy in different stages of EC treatment, with a particular emphasis on curative intent treatment of locally advanced adenocarcinoma and squamous cell cancer. In addition to the already existing literature on immunotherapy for advanced and metastatic stages of EC, the current study provides a comprehensive review of the ongoing trials in 2021 with a focus on earlier stages of treatment in the neo adjuvant and adjuvant settings.

2. Materials and Methods

Four of the authors (HTF, AD, DS, SM) independently undertook electronic literature searches with Medline via PubMed; the detailed research strategy is shown in Appendix A. The references of the selected studies were hand-searched to identify relevant studies missed by the research algorithm. Ongoing trials on targeted therapy/immunotherapy in esophageal cancer (EC) were searched through www.clinicaltrials.gov, whereas the latest ASCO/ASCO GI and ESMO/ESMO GI congress abstracts were also reviewed for preliminary results of ongoing or recently finished trials. Inclusion criteria were as follows: (i) comparative and non-comparative studies of targeted agents for esophageal cancer, for both histological types (adenocarcinoma, squamous cell cancer), (ii) studies with immunotherapy in a context of locally advanced or advanced/metastatic disease. Exclusion criteria were (i) trials involving various types of malignancy, including ‘gastroesophageal cancer’ without separate analysis for EC, (ii) registry studies with no specified treatment protocol, and (iii) studies with <10 patients.

3. Results

3.1. Immunotherapy in Esophageal Squamous Cell Cancer (ESCC)

3.1.1. Advanced/Metastatic Setting

Programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression can be found in up to 40–50% of ESCC [38]; targeted agents such as pembrolizumab [14] and nivolumab [15] have shown promising results in ESCC [38,39]. The KEYNOTE-028 trial (multicenter, randomized phase Ib) treated PD-L1-positive EC patients with pembrolizumab [40], whereby 78% were ESSC. Pembrolizumab showed a prolonged antitumor activity without any relevant toxicity. Median progression-free survival (PFS) was 1.8 months (95% CI, 1.7 to 2.9), and median OS was 7 months (95% CI, 4.3 to 17.7). The KEYNOTE-590 trial compared pembrolizumab and chemotherapy (cisplatin/5-FU) versus chemotherapy alone in 273 patients with locally advanced/unresectable or metastatic including ESCC (73%) [41]. Pembrolizumab and chemotherapy offered superior OS in ESCC patients (with PD-L1 CPS ≥ 10), with a median of 13.9 versus 8.8 months (HR 0.57 [95% CI, 0.43 to 0.75]; p < 0.0001) respectively. Both treatment arms presented an acceptable safety profile [41]. Comparable findings were published in the KEYNOTE-181 phase III trial for advanced ESCC with a CPS >10, treated with second-line pembrolizumab versus chemotherapy. Median OS was 8.2 months for pembrolizumab arm versus 7.1 months (HR, 0.78 [95% CI, 0.63 to 0.96]; p = 0.0095) [42]. Nivolumab was assessed in the ATTRACTION-1 phase II trial [43] in 65 ESCC patients refractory or intolerant to platinum, taxane, and fluoropyrimidine chemotherapy. Nivolumab showed a promising safety profile, and tumor load and target lesions decreased in 29 patients (45%). Median PFS was 1.5 months (95% CI, 1.4 months to 2.8 months), and median OS was 10.8 months (95% CI, 7.4 months to 13.3 months). Comparable outcomes were published in the ATTRACTION-3 phase III trial; 208 ESCC patients were assigned to the nivolumab arm and 209 to the standard chemotherapy arm. Nivolumab was associated with a significant improvement in OS with a median of 10.9 months (95% CI, 9.2 months to 13.3 months) versus 8.4 months for chemotherapy (95% CI, 7.2 months to 9.9 months) (p = 0.019) with favorable safety profile for patients with advanced ESCC [44].

3.1.2. Adjuvant Setting

Neoadjuvant radio-chemotherapy (RCT) is the standard treatment for patients with ESCC in several parts of the world based on the results of the landmark CROSS trial [3,9,38]. However, some patient treated with neoadjuvant RCT would also require additional adjuvant oncological treatment. Such adjuvant therapies are not yet standardized after esophagectomy. The recently published phase III CheckMate 577 trial compared adjuvant nivolumab to placebo in 794 patients with resected (R0) stage II or III EC or GECJ after neoadjuvant RCT [45]. Nivolumab was administered at a dose of 240 mg/2 weeks for 16 weeks, then 480 mg/4 weeks, for a total treatment time up to one year. The histological characteristics of included patients were as follows: 60% EC (29% ESCC and 71% EAC) and 40% of the GECJ. Patients with complete pathological response were excluded. After a median follow-up of 24.4 months, DSF was significantly increased in the nivolumab arm (22.4 months (95% CI, 16.6 months to 34 months). The benefit of nivolumab was found in all subgroups (EC and GECJ) but appeared to be greater for ESCC with a median of DFS of 29.7 months (HR 0.61 [95% CI, 0.43 to 0.75]). The safety profile was good with grade 3–4 side effect rates of 34% in the nivolumab arm and 32% in the placebo arm. Thus, after a median follow-up of two years, nivolumab was associated with a reduction in the risk of recurrence or death by 31% [45]. A post hoc analysis showed a DFS benefit of nivolumab (HR, <1) in patients with a ≥5 CPS.

3.2. Immunotherapy in Esophageal Adenocarcinoma (EAC)

3.2.1. Advanced/Metastatic Setting

In EAC and GEJC patients, response to immunotherapy seems to be dependent on the PD-L1 CPS. Over-expression of PD-L1 (CPS ≥ 10). was associated with better pathological response and overall survival [38]. As in ESCC, PD-L1 expression has been described in 40% of EAC and was found to be higher in the Microsatellite instability (MSI) subtype [38]. In the KEYNOTE-028 trial, the overall response rate in EAC patients was 40% with pembrolizumab [40]. In the CheckMate-032 study (multicenter, randomized phase I), where 63% (101/160) of patients had advanced metastatic EAC or GEJC [46], overall response to nivolumab was reported in 12% of patients; this increased to 24% when combined with ipilimumab, but with higher rates of toxicity. As a first palliative line for advanced junction and lower EAC, the CheckMate-649 study (randomized, phase III) demonstrated improved OS (13.8 months versus 11.1 months) for patients with CPS ≥ 5 for nivolumab + chemotherapy (HR 0.71 [98.4% CI 0.59 to 0.86]; p < 0.0001) [47]. In the KEYNOTE-590 trial, pembrolizumab was studied in combination with chemotherapy in advanced/unresectable GEJ adenocarcinomas, with satisfactory response rates and acceptable toxicity [41].

3.2.2. Adjuvant Setting

The CheckMate-577 study is the only published randomized trial on adjuvant immunotherapy, including 244 patients with EAC [45]. A significant benefit in DFS was observed in patients treated with nivolumab versus placebo in the overall group and for each histological type, irrespective of the lymph node status and PD-L1 status. DFS for EAC patients was 19.4 months for the nivolumab arm versus 11 months for placebo (HR 0.75, 95% CI 0.42 to 0.88, p < 0.001). Of note, no data for overall survival were presented with a follow up of 24 months [45]. An overview of the published trials regarding Advanced/metastatic and adjuvant settings for ESCC and EAC is presented in Table 1.
Table 1

Summary of published results.

RéfTrialTargetPhaseNHistologyArm 1Arm 2Primary EndpointSecondary Endpoint
Advanced/Metastatic Treatment
[40]KEYNOTE-028PD-1/PD-L1Ib2378% ESSCPembrolizumab alone-ORR 30% in PD-L1PFS 1.8 months (95% CI, 1.7 to 2.9 months) OS 7 months (95% CI, 4.3–17.7 months)
[41]KEYNOTE-590PD-1/PD-L1III37273% ESCC (n = 273)27% EAC (n = 99)Pembrolizumab + chemotherapy (Cisplatin/5-FU)Chemotherapy aloneOS for ESCC (CPS ≥ 10) 13.9 versus 8.8 months HR 0.57 [95% CI, 0.43–0.75]
[42]KEYNOTE-181PD-1/PD-L1III31463% ESCC (n = 198)37% EAC(n = 116)PembrolizumabChemotherapyOS 8.2 versus 7.1 months HR, 0.78 [95% CI, 0.63–0.96]
[43]ATTRACTION-1PD-1/PD-L1II65ESCCNivolumab-OS 10.8 months (95% CI, 7.4–13.9)5-year OS 6.3% (95% CI, 2.0–14.0)PFS 1.5 months (95% CI, 1.4–2.8)5-year PFS 6.8% (95% CI, 2.2–15.1)
[44]ATTRACTION-3PD-1/PD-L1III208ESCCNivolumabChemotherapy (Placitaxel/Docetaxel)OS 10.9 months (95% CI, 9.2–13.3 months) versus 8.4 months (95% CI, 7.2–9.9 months)
[46]CheckMate-032PD-1/PD-L1/CTLA-4I16063% EAC (n = 101)NivolumabNivolumab + IpilimumabORR 12% versus 24%
[47]CheckMate-649PD-1/PD-L1III78913% EAC (n = 103)Nivolumab + ChemotherapyChemotherapy alone OS (CPS ≥ 5) 13.8 versus 11.1 months(HR 0.71, 98·4% CI 0.59–0.86)
Adjuvant Treatment
[45]CheckMate-577PD-1/PD-L1III53129% ESCC (n = 155)71% EAC (n = 376)Adjuvant NivolumabPlaceboDFS for ESCC 29.7 months versus 11 months (HR 0.61, 95% CI, 0.43–0.75)DFS for EAC 19.4 months for versus 11 months (HR 0.75 95% CI 0.42–0.88)

DFS = disease-free survival, PFS = progression-free survival, EAC = esophageal adenocarcinoma, ESCC = esophageal squamous cell cancer, OS = Overall Survival, ORR = Objective Response Rate per RECIST 1.1.

3.3. Immunotherapy in EC; Ongoing Trials in 2021 and Preliminary Results

An overview of the 40 ongoing trials and the 14 recently published trials with preliminary data are presented in Table 2 and Table 3.
Table 2

Ongoing trials.

Study Identifier-CountryEstimated Start-End DateNb ofPatientsInclusion CriteriaStudy DesignArm 1Arm 2Primary EndpointStatus
Neoadjuvant Treatment
(a) PD-1/PD-L1 Checkpoint Inhibitors
1.NCT03914443Japan 7 May 2019–1 February 202236ESCC, AC Phase ICisplatin/5FU/Docetaxel Nivolumab-ToxicityActive, not recruiting
2.NCT03987815Korea 1 August 2019–31 July 202220ESCCPhase IINivolumab (3 cycles)-Major pathologic response Recruiting
3.NCT03792347China 21 January 2019–17 June 202020ESCCPhase ICROSS *Pembrolizumab-ToxicityActive, not recruiting
4.NCT04435197China 11 August 2020–June 2025143ESCCPhase IICROSS *Pembrolizumab-pCRRecruiting
5.NCT04973306China July 2021–July 2027176ECPhase II/IIIRCTCROSS *TislelizumabCROSS * pCRNot yet recruiting
6.NCT04974047China 17 August 2021–30 May 202665ESCCPhase IINon-randomizedCarboplatin/PaclitaxelTislelizumabCarbotaxol/PaclitaxelTislelizumabChemoradiationpCRRecruiting
7.NCT04776590China 28 January 2021–15 December 202430ESCCPhase IICROSS *Tislelizumab pCRRecruiting
8.NCT04848753China 12 May 2021–12 May 2026500ESCCPhase IIIRCTCisplatin/PaclitaxelToripalimab Cisplatin/PaclitaxelEvent-free survivalRecruiting
9.NCT04006041China 25 June 2019–21 December 202044ESCCPhase IICisplatin/Paclitaxel/44 GyToripalimab-pCRRecruiting
10.NCT04644250China 1 September 2020–1 March 202432ESCCPhase IICROSS *Toripalimab- pCRRecruiting
11.NCT04177797China 20 March 2020–31 December 202120ESCCPhase IICarboplatin/PaclitaxelToripalimab-pCRActive, not recruiting
12.NCT04804696China April 2021–March 202453ESCCPhase IICarboplatin/PaclitaxelToripalimab -pCRRecruiting
13.NCT04888403China 3 December 2021–2 July 202245ESCCPhase IIPaclitaxel/Nedaplatin41.4GyToripalimab.pCRNot yet recruiting
14.NCT04177875China 1 May 2019–30 April 202240ESCCPhase IIDocetaxel/Paclitaxel/Cisplatin + 40GyToripalimab -Major pathologic response Recruiting
15.NCT03917966China 7 April 2020–October 202260ESCCPhase IIDocetaxel/NedaplatinCamrelizumab -ORRRecruiting
16.NCT04506138China 11 August 2020–21 December 202546ESCCPhase I/IICarboplatin/PaclitaxelCamrelizumab-Major Pathologic responseRecruiting
17.NCT04767295China 1 March 2021–1 March 202328ESCCPhase IICarboplatin/PaclitaxelCamrelizumab-ORRRecruiting
18.NCT04625543China December 2020–September 2023100ESCC (PD-L1 > 10%)Phase IIRCTPaclitaxel/Cisplatin Sintilimab Paclitaxel/Cisplatin Major pathologic response Not yet recruiting
19.NCT03946969China 8 May 2019–1 October 202240ESCCPhase I-IICisplatin/Paclitaxel/S-1Sintilimab -ToxicityRecruiting
20.NCT04568200China 19 June 2020–December 202360ESCCPhase IINon-randomizedCROSS *DurvalumabCROSS *Pathologic responseRecruiting
21.NCT04215471China February 2020–December 202030ESCCPhase IISHR-131-ORRNot yet recruiting
22.NCT04460066China 1 November 2020–1 November 202370ESCCPhase I/IIRCTPaclitaxel/CisplatinSocazolimab Paclitaxel/CisplatinPlaceboMajor pathologic response Not yet recruiting
(b) Combined Therapy
23.NCT04229459Israel30 December 2019–June 202731ESCCPhase I/II5FU/Cisplatin +50.4 GyCetuximab Nivolumab-pCRRecruiting
24.NCT04929392USA1 October 2021–3 December 202324ESCC, EACPhase IICROSS *PembrolizumabLenvatinib-pCRRecruiting
25.NCT03044613USA11 July 2017–February 202432ESCC, EACPhase IBNon-randomizedCROSS *NivolumabCROSS *NivolumabRelatlimabTreatment-related toxicityActive, not recruiting
(c) Other Targeted Therapy
26.NCT02812641TaiwanJune 2016–December 202150Stage IIIESCCPhase I/IIRCT5FU/Cisplatin40GyBevacizumab5FU/Cisplatin40GypCRRecruiting
27.NCT03165994USA6 October 2017–31 December 202126ESCC, EACPhase I/IICarboplatin/Paclitaxel50.4GySotigalimab(APX005M)-Treatment-related toxicityRecruiting
28.NCT03857763China1 March 2019–1 March 202340ESCCPhase IICROSS *Apatinib-pCRNot yet recruiting
Definitive Chemoradiation
29.NCT02409186ChinaMarch 2015–December 2021200ESCCPhase IIIRCTCisplatin/Paclitaxel59.4GyNimotuzumabCisplatin/Paclitaxel59.4GyPlaceboOSRecruiting
30.NCT03957590China12 June 2019–30 October 2023316ESCCPhase IIIRCTCisplatin/Paclitaxel50.4GyTislelizumabCisplatin/Paclitaxel50.4GyPlaceboPFSRecruiting
Perioperative Immunotherapy
31.NCT04389177KEYSTONE 001, China8 July 2020–31 December 202450ESCCPhase IIRCTCisplatin/PaclitaxelPerioperative Pembrolizumab-Major pathologic responseRecruiting
32.NCT04807673KEYSTONE-002, ChinaMay 2021–May 2028342ESCCPhase III RCTCROSS *Perioperative PembrolizumabPaclitaxel/CisplatinPembrolizumabSurgeryEvent-free survivalRecruiting
33.NCT02844075ChinaJanuary 2017-May 202218ESCCPhase IICROSS *Perioperative Pembrolizumab-pCRActive, not recruiting
34.NCT04437212China1 July 2020–3 December 202320ESCCPhase IICROSS *Perioperative Toripalimab-Major pathologic responseRecruiting
35.NCT04280822China21 April 2020–2 March 2028400ESCCPhase IIIRCTCisplatin/PaclitaxelPerioperative ToripalimabCisplatin/PaclitaxelSurgeryEvent-free survivalRecruiting
36.NCT04989985China1 September 2021–1 August 2027302Junction EACPhase IIRCTPerioperativeOxaliplatin/S-1SinitilimabPerioperativeOxaliplatin/S-1pCRRecruiting
37.NCT03490292USA29 May 2018–February 202424ESCC, EACPhase I/IICROSS *Perioperative Avelumab-ToxicityRecruiting
Adjuvant Treatment
38.NCT04159974Germany30 September 2019–June 202456EAC Phase IIRCTChemoradiation DurvalumabSurgeryChemoradiation SurgeryDurvalumab/TremelimumabpCRRecruiting
39.NCT02520453KoreaFebruary 2016–December 202186ESCCPhase IIRCTDurvalumabPlaceboDFSActive, not recruiting
40.ChiCTR2100045651ChinaMay 2021–December 2022220ESSCPhase IIICisplatin-based doubletTislelizumabTislelizumabDFSActive

DFS = disease-free survival, EAC = esophageal adenocarcinoma, ESCC = esophageal squamous cell cancer, HER-2 = Human Epidermal Receptor-2, pCR = pathologic complete response, RCT = Randomized Controlled Trial, OS = Overall Survival, ORR = Objective Response Rate per RECIST 1.1. CROSS * = Carboplatin/Paclitaxel + 41.4Gy according to the CROSS regimen [9]. Major pathologic response = TRG1-2 according to Mandard [48].

Table 3

Preliminary results summary.

Principal InvestigatorStudy IdentifierNb of PatientsInclusion CriteriaStudy DesignTreatment DetailsPrimary EndpointPrimary Endpoint Results
Neoadjuvant Treatment
Cheng, ChaoChiCTR200002890020ESCCPhase IICarboplatin/PaclitaxelCamrelizumabpCR27.8%
Li, Jingpei NCT0422536456ESCCPhase IINabpaclitaxel/Cisplatin Camrelizumab pCR35.3%
Li, ZhigangChiCTR190002624060ESCCPhase IICarboplatin/PaclitaxelCamrelizumabpCR42.5%
Wang, FengNCT0391796626ESCCPhase IINedaplatin/DocetaxelCamrelizumabMajor pathologic response, pCR42% major response25% pCR
Wang, Zhen ChiCTR190002388030ESCCPhase IbChemotherapy(Nabpaclitaxel/Platin/Apatinib) CamrelizumabSafety and feasibility80% patients received all planned cycles, 36.7% serious adverse effects
Zhao, Lingdi NCT 0398567030ESCCPhase IISimultaneous versus sequential chemo-immunotherapy(Paclitaxel/Cisplatin+ Toripalimab)pCR36.4% sequential versus 7.7% simultaneous, p = 0.079
Safran, HowardNCT01196390203EAC, HER2 (+)Phase III,RCTCarboplatin/Paclitaxel + 50.4Gy+/− TranstuzumabDFS OSMedian DFS: 19.6 mo (CR/T) versus 14.2 mo (CR), p = 0.85
Yamamoto, ShunNCT03914443FRONTiER13ESCCPhase I5FU/CisplatinNivolumabtoxicitypCR50% ≥ grade 3 adverse events33.3% pCR
Zhang ZChiCTR190002659340ESCCPhase IICarboplatin/PaclitaxelSintilimabMajor pathologic response47.5% major response25% pCR
Perioperative-Adjuvant Treatment
Al-Batran SENCT03421288DANTE trial40Gastro-EACPhase IIFLOT [8]Perioperative Atezolizumab + adjuvant AtezolizumabAdverse events80% in arm FLOT-A, 70% in arm FLOT
Eads, JenniferNCT0360499131EACPhase IRCTCarboplatin/Paclitaxel + 41.4GyPerioperative NivolumabSafety, side effectsNo disproportionate toxicity added by Nivolumab
YuyatKu, GeoffreyNCT0296206336EACPhase I/II5FU/platin + 50.4GyPerioperative DarvolumabpCRpCR 24%
Mamdani HirvaNCT0263906524EACPhase II5FU/Cisplatin + radiationAdjuvant DarvolumabToxicity12.3% ≥ grade 3 adverse events
Athauda, AvaniNCT03399071ICONIC15EACPhase II/IFLOT [8]Perioperative AvelumabTreatment-related toxicityR0 rate60% Grade 3–4 toxicity100% R0

ESCC = Esophageal Squamous cell carcinoma, EAC = esophageal adenocarcinoma, RCT = Randomized Controlled Trial. pCR = pathologic complete response.

3.3.1. Neoadjuvant Setting

Anti-Human Epidermal Receptor-2 (HER-2) Targeted Therapy

Preliminary results of the NRG Oncology/RTOG 1010 phase III randomized trial (NCT01196390) on patients with locally advanced HER-2 positive EAC were recently reported. The addition of trastuzumab to neoadjuvant chemoradiation (carboplatin/paclitaxel + 50.4Gy) did not provide any significant DFS (19.6 month trastuzumab versus 14.2 month control, p = 0.85) or OS (38.5 month trastuzumab versus 38.9 month control) benefit to the targeted therapy group. Recently, the TRAP trial demonstrated 34% pCR rates and an improved overall survival in HER2 (+) EAC patients treated with chemoradiation and a combination of trastuzumab/pertuzumab [49]. The INNOVATION EORTC-1203-GITCG trial [50] investigates the combination of standard chemotherapy with trastuzumab/pertuzumab in HER-2 overexpressing gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma in the neoadjuvant setting. Similarly, the MATTERHORN (NCT04592913) and MONEO (NCT03979131) trials are assessing the combination of perioperative FLOT [8] and darvolumab and atelumab, respectively, in gastric and gastroesophageal junction cancer.

PD-1/PD-L1 Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors

Several ongoing trials are investigating novel PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitors in the preoperative setting of locally advanced EC. Nivolumab in association with neoadjuvant chemotherapy (cisplatin/docetaxel/5FU) is being assessed in a phase I trial in ESCC/EAC (NCT03914443), and as a single agent for ESCC patients (three cycles preoperatively) in a phase II study (NCT03987815). Preliminary results of the FRONTiER trial (NCT03914443) suggest a rate of >50% serious adverse effects (grade 3–4) when nivolumab was added to 5FU/cisplatin, with a 33.3% pathologic complete response (pCR). Pembrolizumab in association with CROSS-protocol (carboplatin/paclitaxel +41.4Gy, [9] chemoradiation is under assessment in two ESCC phase I/II trials (NCT04435197, NCT03792347). Nivo- and pembrolizumab are also under phase I-II assessment in combination with other targeted agents (cetuximab, lenvatinib, relatlimab) (Table 2). Tislelizumab in association with [9] chemoradiation or carboplatin/paclitaxel chemotherapy is being studied in three phase II–III trials (NCT04973306, NCT04974047, NCT04776590), all in Asian populations of ESCC. Another recently approved checkpoint inhibitor in China, toripalimab is under assessment in several phase II studies for locally advanced ESCC, with either preoperative chemotherapy (NCT03985670, NCT04177797, NCT04804696) or chemoradiation with the CROSS regimen (NCT04888403, NCT04177875, NCT04006041, NCT04644250). One phase III randomized trial, investigating preoperative paclitaxel/cisplatin with or without toripalimab, is expected to include 500 patients until May 2026 (NCT04848753). Preliminary results from the NCT03985670 trial report a 36.4% pCR after sequential administration of toripalimab (two days after the start of cisplatin/taxane chemotherapy). Anti-PD-1 blockade with camrelizumab is being extensively studied in Asian populations of locally advanced ESCC. Three phase I-II trials with camrelizumab added to neoadjuvant platin/taxane regimens are ongoing (NCT03917966, NCT04506138, NCT04767295), whereas preliminary results reported pCR rates between 25–42.5% and 37% serious adverse events after platin/taxane and camrelizumab neoadjuvant therapy (ChiCTR2000028900, NCT04225364, ChiCTR1900026240, NCT03917966, ChiCTR1900023880). Sintilimab, durvalumab, SHR-131 and socazolimab are among other recent checkpoint inhibitors in the course of phase I–II assessment in ESCC patients (Table 2). The only preliminary results available report a 25% pCR for sintilimab in a phase II trial (ChiCTR1900026593).

Other Targeted Agents

Anti-VEGF agents (bevacizumab) and other tyrosine-kinase inhibitors (apatinib, sotigalimab) are in preliminary (phase I–II) stages of assessment in the neoadjuvant setting of EC.

3.3.2. Definitive Chemoradiation

Two phase III randomized trials are currently assessing nimotuzumab (NCT02409186) and tislelizumab (NCT03957590) combined with definitive, potentially curative, chemoradiation (cisplatin/paclitaxel + 50–59.4Gy) for ESCC patients.

3.3.3. Perioperative- Adjuvant Treatment

Targeted therapy is an area of intense interest in the perioperative setting for locally advanced, resectable EC. The KEYSTONE 1 and 2 trials (NCT04389177, NCT04807673) are currently evaluating the benefit of perioperative pembrolizumab in pCR rates and DFS in an Asian ESCC population. A large phase III randomized trial assesses toripalimab in ESCC patients (NCT04280822). Two phase II trials are investigating perioperative checkpoint inhibitors (sintilimab, avelumab) in EAC patients (NCT04989985, NCT03490292), whereas preliminary phase I results of the NCT03604991 trial reported no additional toxicity when perioperative nivolumab was added to the standard CROSS regimen. Darvolumab has shown some promising preliminary results in the perioperative and adjuvant settings in EAC patients, with 24% pCR and 12.3% serious adverse effects (grade 3/4). (NCT02962063, NCT02639065). The combination of PD-L1 inhibitors to the FLOT regimen [8] was recently proposed. Al-Batran, in an interim safety analysis of the DANTE trial (NCT03421288), reported high rates of toxicity (80% in the arm FLOT-atezolizumab versus 70% in the FLOT arm), although a proportion was attributed to preoperative comorbidity; similarly, interim results of the ICONIC trial (NCT03399071) suggest 60% grade 3–4 toxicity after FLOT/avelumab [51].

4. Discussion

In recent years, immunotherapy has demonstrated promising results as part of the armamentarium of EC treatment. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (PD-1/PD-L1 blockade) were firstly used in advanced or metastatic disease, in heavily pre-treated patients. After the recent CheckMate-577 trial suggesting a significant benefit of adjuvant nivolumab after standard CROSS regimen, several ongoing studies are assessing checkpoint inhibitors in the perioperative context. This places immunotherapy studies in the curative setting, which would be a major step forward for esophageal cancer. However, there are various issues that need particular attention before integrating immunotherapy on a large scale.

4.1. Future Perspectives and Challenges in Targeted Therapy of EC

4.1.1. Tumor Microenvironment (TME); the Tumor’s Signature and the Key to Targeted Treatment

The tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), as part of the host’s defense mechanism against solid tumors, play an important role. Each tumor triggers an individual immunologic response with a large variability in the number and type of TILs that form its specific TME. The presence and density of TILs have been correlated with better long-term prognosis and improved response to immunotherapy [52]. Many different types of lymphocytes have been identified in the TME (CD4+ with/without suppressor FoxP3+ expression, CD8+ with/without PD-L1 expression, and M2 macrophages) [53,54], reflecting the complex interplay between tumor antigenicity and host immune reaction. Increased CD8+ infiltration of the stroma and tumor margins has been associated with better OS and DFS in EC patients [28,29,30,55,56], and in particular, in EAC [57]. Conversely, CD4+ cells expressing the forkhead box transcription factor (FoxP3+, 5–10% of all CD4 lymphocytes) have been associated with a local immunosuppressive effect, enhancing immunotolerance against solid tumors [58,59]. However, the exact prognostic value of the TME is not yet clear for EC, and it has few clinical implications up to this day. Recently, pre-treatment M2 macrophage infiltration was associated with poor response to chemotherapy and shorter DFS in ESCC patients [53,54], whereas the presence of FoxP3+ TILs was also related to a worse prognosis in ovarian cancer patients [58,60]. On the other hand, chemotherapy and radiation have been proven to modify pre-treatment TME; although the exact mechanism has yet to be elucidated, cellular destruction by cytotoxic treatment leads to larger exposure of the intra-tumoral mutational load and elicits local cytokine production, stimulating the host’s immune system [61]. The immune response is enhanced mostly by increased peritumoral CD8+ TIL and/or suppression of inhibitory Treg (FoxP3+) cells [58,61]. According to previous studies on rectal cancer, external beam radiation induces a significant decrease of inhibitory (FoxP3+) cells and modifies the CD8+/FoxP3+ ratio of TILs in the tumor and stromal tissue, leading to improved progression-free survival [26,58]. The cellular TME, in addition to its unique immunologic signature, has a therapeutic potential. Tumor lymphocytes (TILs) activated against tumor antigens are retrieved and genetically engineered (cloned) in vitro before being re-infused in the patient [15]. This innovative line of treatment has shown promising results in metastatic melanoma patients, but also in other types of solid tumors with poor prognosis and limited therapeutic options (e.g., cholangiocarcinoma) [62,63]. Currently, NeoTIL-ACT is an ongoing phase I pilot trial for patients with recurrent or metastatic solid tumors (NCT04643574), based on lymphodepleting chemotherapy followed by with low-dose radiation and infusion of autologous expanded TILs enriched for tumor antigen specificity (NeoTIL). Although the study was only recently initiated (2021), it is very promising in the context of advanced, metastatic disease in heavily pre-treated oncologic patients.

4.1.2. Future Outlook: Cancer Vaccines and CAR T-Cell Therapy

Cancer vaccines have been for a long time one of the high hopes of humanity to cure cancer. However, due to the variable antigenicity and significant mutational load even among tumors of the same type, development of efficient cancer vaccines has remained a challenge [38,64]. Dendritic cells (DCs), as part of the host’s immune response, have a great capacity to present antigens on their surface, triggering intense cytotoxic lymphocyte response [65]. DC vaccines were recently tested in a randomized study of 40 EC patients undergoing radiation and surgery [66]. Tumor heat-shock proteins were extracted from surgical specimens and cultured in vitro with the patient’s autologous DC and these were then re-infused to the patient. The experimental vaccine group not only showed a significantly increased immune response (higher circulating IL-2, IL-12 and INF-γ, and CD8+ cytotoxic cells) but also a better 2-year survival compared to patients treated only with radiation and surgery. However promising, these results are preliminary and need further validation before implementing in clinical practice. Similarly, peptide vaccines, created from antigens retrieved in tumor lysate, aim to stimulate and activate the host’s cytotoxic T cells, reinforcing innate antitumor activity [64,67]. Recent data suggest a significantly enhanced immunological response in ESCC patients treated with peptide vaccine preoperatively (e.g., NY-ESO-1, S-588410, other multi-peptide vaccines), with an acceptable safety profile (e.g., NY-ESO-1, S-588410, other multi-peptide vaccines) [68]. Promising 5-year results of another multi-peptide vaccine tested have just been published, when administered to lymph-node positive ESCC patients as an adjuvant after surgery [69]. In this non-randomized phase II trial, cancer-free survival was significantly better in patients treated with the vaccine after surgery [69]. Several ongoing trials are currently evaluating peptide vaccines in adjuvant and metastatic settings for ESCC (NTC01697527, NCT00995358) [38]. CAR T-cell therapy is another potent immunotherapeutic treatment approach, aiming to genetically engineer natural killer T cells to target specific tumor antigens [15]. Although promising results have been shown in hematologic malignancies, the solid tumor environment is less favorable for these agents. This is due to the lack of tumor-specific antigens, the potential local immunosuppressive action from the activated PD-1/PD-L1 complex, as well as the severe reported toxicities resembling a systemic cytokine storm [70].

4.1.3. Geographical Differences in EC Treatment

The role of immunotherapy has mostly been proven for ESCC. The vast majority of these trials are conducted in Asian populations with a high prevalence of ESCC lesions. However, little is known as to whether these results can be safely extrapolated to the Western population where EAC is the prevalent form of EC. It has previously been proven that even for similar histologic types of cancer, such as gastric adenocarcinoma, there are inherent differences in biologic behavior and prognosis between Eastern and Western populations, with superior survival in patients from Asian series [71,72,73,74]. In gastric cancer, inherent differences in tumor biology seem to play a role, as these differences remain even when tumor stage, perioperative treatment, and extent of lymphadenectomy are accounted for [71,72]. Therefore, how certain are we that EC with its inherent histologic polymorphism will be as responsive to targeted agents for Western patients as it seems to be in Eastern ESCC populations? As seen above, the Asian series have the lion’s share in ongoing clinical trials on immunotherapy for EC. This might introduce significant bias when trying to implement the same therapies to western, EAC-predominant, series.

4.1.4. Health-Policy Issues

An often neglected aspect of novel therapies is the methodological, legal, and ethical framework that determines their research and development. Currently, the overwhelming majority of scientific research on immunotherapy is industry-driven, with few or no measures implemented to guarantee the absence of data dredging or publication bias. International study registries exist to enhance transparency in medical research, but most of these studies are then published even when major discrepancies are seen between the study protocol and the reported outcomes. Thus, instead of multiplying ‘feasibility’ trials whose ethical regulations and anticipated benefit remain obscure, the scientific community and related stakeholders should focus on guaranteeing the reliability, quality, and expected clinical benefit of ongoing and future trials on this fascinating field of immunotherapy [75]. Last but not least, the financial aspect of all these novel treatments needs to be considered. Nivolumab is currently being introduced to a large EC patient population following the results of the hallmark CheckMate-577 study [45]. Taking a closer look at the trials, although nivolumab offered a robust benefit in terms of progression-free survival, which was the primary endpoint, OS data are still pending, but it is OS benefit that drives insurance reimbursement worldwide. Nivolumab is currently approved by the EMA (European Medicines Agency, Amsterdam, The Netherlands) and the FDA (Food and Drug Administration, White Oak, MD, USA). It is also accepted and reimbursed upon demand by health insurances in Switzerland, where the financial cost per patient/year is estimated at €100.000. Previous USA-based analyses estimated the cost to be even higher, at $6,676 per cycle, thus $160.160 a year [76]. However, little is known about the actual financial burden (actual price, adverse events, post-progression treatment) it represents and its cost-effectiveness. Recent data from the field of hepatocellular carcinoma compared pembrolizumab to placebo as a second-line treatment showed an incremental 0.153 life-year benefit for the anti-PD-1 agent, with a supplementary cost of $47.057 per year [77]. In this context, it was estimated that either a survival benefit >12 months or a significant reduction in price (57.7%) are needed for it to become cost-effective [77]. As pembrolizumab and nivolumab have comparable financial costs [76], caution is needed before implementing this treatment on a large scale without taking into account its financial aspect. Health care providers and all related policy makers need to be conscious of the considerable financial stakes related to immunotherapy. Health care systems around the world need to be able to afford these treatments without jeopardizing the already fragile financial balance most of them face, and most importantly, without compromising equity of patient access to care.

5. Conclusions

Esophageal cancer treatment enters a new era where targeted immunotherapeutic agents are increasingly used to complement or even replace classic cytotoxic agents. An overwhelming number of studies are currently ongoing to assess all these novel agents, with the aim to stimulate and specifically drive the host’s immune system against cancer antigens. Immunotherapy is a complex, fascinating, and potentially practice-changing field of cancer research, with the list of novel treatment lines growing exponentially (immune checkpoint inhibitors, adoptive TILs, cancer vaccines, CAR T-cell therapies). Although promising preliminary results have been published, large-scale studies and long-term results from both a clinical and financial point of view must be mandated before wide implementation in clinical practice.
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1.  The expression of the regulatory T cell-specific forkhead box transcription factor FoxP3 is associated with poor prognosis in ovarian cancer.

Authors:  Dominik Wolf; Anna M Wolf; Holger Rumpold; Heidi Fiegl; Alain G Zeimet; Elisabeth Muller-Holzner; Martina Deibl; Guenther Gastl; Eberhard Gunsilius; Christian Marth
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2005-12-01       Impact factor: 12.531

Review 2.  The integration of T cell migration, differentiation and function.

Authors:  David Masopust; Jason M Schenkel
Journal:  Nat Rev Immunol       Date:  2013-04-19       Impact factor: 53.106

3.  Oesophageal cancer: ESMO Clinical Practice Guidelines for diagnosis, treatment and follow-up.

Authors:  F Lordick; C Mariette; K Haustermans; R Obermannová; D Arnold
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2016-09       Impact factor: 32.976

4.  Phase II Feasibility and Biomarker Study of Neoadjuvant Trastuzumab and Pertuzumab With Chemoradiotherapy for Resectable Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2-Positive Esophageal Adenocarcinoma: TRAP Study.

Authors:  Charlotte I Stroes; Sandor Schokker; Aafke Creemers; Remco J Molenaar; Maarten C C M Hulshof; Stephanie O van der Woude; Roel J Bennink; Ron A A Mathôt; Kausilia K Krishnadath; Cornelis J A Punt; Rob H A Verhoeven; Martijn G H van Oijen; Geert-Jan Creemers; Grard A P Nieuwenhuijzen; Maurice J C van der Sangen; Laurens V Beerepoot; Joos Heisterkamp; Maartje Los; Marije Slingerland; Annemieke Cats; Geke A P Hospers; Maarten F Bijlsma; Mark I van Berge Henegouwen; Sybren L Meijer; Hanneke W M van Laarhoven
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2019-12-06       Impact factor: 44.544

Review 5.  Oesophageal cancer.

Authors:  Jesper Lagergren; Elizabeth Smyth; David Cunningham; Pernilla Lagergren
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2017-06-22       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  Safety and Antitumor Activity of the Anti-Programmed Death-1 Antibody Pembrolizumab in Patients With Advanced Esophageal Carcinoma.

Authors:  Toshihiko Doi; Sarina A Piha-Paul; Shadia I Jalal; Sanatan Saraf; Jared Lunceford; Minori Koshiji; Jaafar Bennouna
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2017-11-08       Impact factor: 44.544

Review 7.  The immune landscape of esophageal cancer.

Authors:  Tu-Xiong Huang; Li Fu
Journal:  Cancer Commun (Lond)       Date:  2019-11-26

Review 8.  Tumor regression grading of gastrointestinal carcinomas after neoadjuvant treatment.

Authors:  Svenja Thies; Rupert Langer
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2013-10-07       Impact factor: 6.244

9.  Mutational heterogeneity in cancer and the search for new cancer-associated genes.

Authors:  Michael S Lawrence; Petar Stojanov; Paz Polak; Gregory V Kryukov; Kristian Cibulskis; Andrey Sivachenko; Scott L Carter; Chip Stewart; Craig H Mermel; Steven A Roberts; Adam Kiezun; Peter S Hammerman; Aaron McKenna; Yotam Drier; Lihua Zou; Alex H Ramos; Trevor J Pugh; Nicolas Stransky; Elena Helman; Jaegil Kim; Carrie Sougnez; Lauren Ambrogio; Elizabeth Nickerson; Erica Shefler; Maria L Cortés; Daniel Auclair; Gordon Saksena; Douglas Voet; Michael Noble; Daniel DiCara; Pei Lin; Lee Lichtenstein; David I Heiman; Timothy Fennell; Marcin Imielinski; Bryan Hernandez; Eran Hodis; Sylvan Baca; Austin M Dulak; Jens Lohr; Dan-Avi Landau; Catherine J Wu; Jorge Melendez-Zajgla; Alfredo Hidalgo-Miranda; Amnon Koren; Steven A McCarroll; Jaume Mora; Brian Crompton; Robert Onofrio; Melissa Parkin; Wendy Winckler; Kristin Ardlie; Stacey B Gabriel; Charles W M Roberts; Jaclyn A Biegel; Kimberly Stegmaier; Adam J Bass; Levi A Garraway; Matthew Meyerson; Todd R Golub; Dmitry A Gordenin; Shamil Sunyaev; Eric S Lander; Gad Getz
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2013-06-16       Impact factor: 49.962

10.  Tumour infiltrating lymphocytes correlate with improved survival in patients with oesophageal adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  Fergus Noble; Toby Mellows; Leo H McCormick Matthews; Adrian C Bateman; Scott Harris; Timothy J Underwood; James P Byrne; Ian S Bailey; Donna M Sharland; Jamie J Kelly; John N Primrose; Surinder S Sahota; Andrew R Bateman; Gareth J Thomas; Christian H Ottensmeier
Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother       Date:  2016-03-28       Impact factor: 6.968

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  6 in total

Review 1.  Severe Radiation-Induced Lymphopenia Affects the Outcomes of Esophageal Cancer: A Comprehensive Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Dongjun Dai; Qiaoying Tian; Genhua Yu; Yongjie Shui; Hao Jiang; Qichun Wei
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-06-20       Impact factor: 6.575

Review 2.  Current Landscape of Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Therapy for Hepatocellular Carcinoma.

Authors:  Nikolaos Machairas; Diamantis I Tsilimigras; Timothy M Pawlik
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-04-16       Impact factor: 6.575

3.  Intelligent Identification of Early Esophageal Cancer by Band-Selective Hyperspectral Imaging.

Authors:  Tsung-Jung Tsai; Arvind Mukundan; Yu-Sheng Chi; Yu-Ming Tsao; Yao-Kuang Wang; Tsung-Hsien Chen; I-Chen Wu; Chien-Wei Huang; Hsiang-Chen Wang
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-09-01       Impact factor: 6.575

Review 4.  The Role of the Heat-Shock Proteins in Esophagogastric Cancer.

Authors:  Francisco Tustumi; Gabriel Andrade Agareno; Ricardo Purchio Galletti; Rafael Benjamim Rosa da Silva; Julia Grams Quintas; Lucas de Abreu Sesconetto; Daniel José Szor; Nelson Wolosker
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2022-08-27       Impact factor: 7.666

5.  Change in PD-L1 and CD8 Expression after Chemoradiotherapy for Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma.

Authors:  Wei-Chung Chen; Chun-Chieh Wu; Yi-Hsun Chen; Jui-Ying Lee; Yao-Kuang Wang; Nian-Siou Wu; Ming-Tsang Wu; I-Chen Wu
Journal:  Biomedicines       Date:  2022-08-04

6.  Distance to Health Care Facilities, Lifestyle Risk Factors, and Stage at Diagnosis in relation to Geographic Pattern of Esophageal Cancer in Tanzania, 2006-2016.

Authors:  Richard Watkins; Ghada A Soliman; Julius Mwaiselage; Crispin Kahesa; Khadija Msami; Mark L Wilson
Journal:  J Cancer Epidemiol       Date:  2022-08-22
  6 in total

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