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The features and management of acquired resistance to PD1-based therapy in metastatic melanoma.

Adriana Hepner ,
Judith M Versluis ,
Roslyn Wallace ,
Clara Allayous ,
Lauren Julia Brown ,
Claudia Trojaniello ,
Camille Lea Gerard ,
Yanina Jl Jansen ,
Prachi Bhave ,
Bart Neyns ,
Andrew Haydon ,
Olivier Michielin ,
Joanna Mangana ,
Oliver Klein ,
Alexander N Shoushtari ,
Allison Betof Warner ,
Paolo Antonio Ascierto ,
Jennifer Leigh McQuade ,
Matteo S Carlino ,
Lisa Zimmer ,
Celeste Lebbe ,
Douglas B Johnson ,
Shahneen Sandhu ,
Victoria Atkinson ,
Christian U Blank ,
Serigne N Lo ,
Georgina V Long ,
Alexander M Menzies

Abstract

METHODS

Pts from 16 centres who responded to PD1-based therapy and who later progressed were examined. Demographics, disease characteristics and subsequent treatments were evaluated.

CONCLUSIONS

Acquired resistance to PD1 therapy in melanoma is largely oligometastatic, and pts may have a favorable survival outcome following salvage treatment.

RESULTS

299 melanoma pts were identified, median age 64y, 44% BRAFV600m. 172 (58%) received PD1 alone, 114 (38%) PD1/CTLA4 and 13 (4%) PD1 and an investigational drug. 90 (30%) pts had CR, 209 (70%) PR. Median time to AR was 12.6 mo (95% CI, 11.3, 14.2). Most (N = 193, 65%) progressed in a single organ site, and in a solitary lesion (N = 151, 51%). The most frequent sites were lymph nodes (38%) and brain (25%). Management at AR included systemic therapy (ST, 45%), local therapy (LT) +ST (31%), LT alone (21%), or observation (3%). There was no statistical difference in PFS2 or OS based on management, however, PFS2 was numerically superior for pts treated with ST alone who progressed off PD1 therapy than those who progressed on PD1 (2-year PFS2 42% versus 25%, p = 0.249). mOS from AR was 38.0 months (95% CI, 29.5-NR); longer in single-site versus multi-site progression (2-year OS 70% vs 54%, p < 0·001).

BACKGROUND

Anti-PD-1 therapy (PD1) either alone or with anti-CTLA-4 (CTLA4), has high initial response rates, however 20% of patients (pts) with complete response (CR) and 30% with partial response (PR) within 12 months of treatment experience subsequent disease progression by 6 years. The nature and optimal management of this acquired resistance (AR) remains unknown.

More about this publication

European journal of cancer (Oxford, England : 1990)

Volume 196
Pages 113441
Publication date 01-01-2024

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1016/j.ejca.2023.113441
Europe PubMed Central 37988842
Pubmed 37988842

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