scholarly journals Long-Term Survival of Patients with Advanced Melanoma in Phase 2 Study of Nivolumab (Anti-Pd-1; Ono-4538/Bms-936558)

2014 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. iv379 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Kiyohara ◽  
H. Tahara ◽  
H. Uhara ◽  
Y. Moroi ◽  
N. Yamazaki
Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 904-904 ◽  
Author(s):  
Naval Daver ◽  
Hagop M. Kantarjian ◽  
Gail J. Roboz ◽  
Patricia L. Kropf ◽  
Karen W.L. Yee ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Guadecitabine (SGI-110) is a novel next-generation hypomethylating agent (HMA) administered as a small volume subcutaneous (SC) injection which results in extended decitabine exposure. Phase 2 study has been conducted in r/r AML patients using two different doses and schedules of guadecitabine. We report here long term survival and clinical complete response rates in various prognostic subgroups of r/r AML patients Methods: r/r AML patients who were either refractory to or relapsed after induction chemotherapy were enrolled in this Phase 2 study. In the first cohort, patients were randomized (1:1) to either 60 mg/m2/d or 90 mg/m2/d on Days 1-5 (5-day regimen). In the second cohort, patients were assigned to treatment with 60 mg/m2/d on Days 1-5 and Days 8-12 (10-day regimen) for up to 4 cycles, followed by 60 mg/m2/d Days 1-5 in subsequent cycles. Cycles were scheduled every 28 days for both regimens with dose reductions/delays allowed based on response and tolerability. Patients remained on treatment as long as they continued to benefit without unacceptable toxicity. The primary endpoint was the composite Complete Response (CRc) rate: CR + CR with incomplete platelet recovery and normal neutrophils count (CRp) + CR with incomplete neutrophil recovery (CRi) using modified International Working Group (IWG) criteria (Cheson et al, 2003). Secondary endpoints included overall survival (OS), and safety as measured by Adverse Events (AEs) using CTCAE v4.0, and early 30 and 60-day all-cause mortality. Individual dose and schedule results were previously reported (Roboz et al, European Society of Medical Oncology, 2014) where there was no difference between the 2 doses of 60 and 90 mg/m2/d and a trend of higher CRc and CR for the 10-day initial intensification regimen. We report here long tem survival and CRc data in various prognostic subgroups in the overall r/r AML patient population treated with guadecitabine. Results: 103 r/r AML patients were treated with guadecitabine (50 with 5-day regimen and 53 with the initial 10-day intensification regimen). Eight six patients (84%) received prior standard 7+3 induction; 15 patients (14%) received other prior induction chemotherapy regimens mostly with high dose cytarabine; clofarabine or cladribine with or without cytarabine; and only 2 patients (2%) received HMA as prior front line induction treatment. Median age was 60y (range 22-82y); male 60%; PS 2 in 14%; poor risk cytogenetics 41%; prior Hematopoietic Cell Transplant (HCT) 18%, and median number of 2 prior regimens (range 1-10) including 11% with prior HMA treatment. CRc was achieved in 24 patients (23%). After a median follow up of 29 months, the median OS was 6.6 months with 1-y and 2-y survival rates of 28 and 19% respectively. CRc was associated with statistically significant longer survival; median OS not reached for patients in CRc and was 5.6 months for patients with no CRc (p<0.01). Table 1 shows CRc rates and Median OS in some of the standard prognostic subgroups. Clinical activity in terms of CRc was observed in all subgroups with no statistically significant difference between any of the prognostic subgroups examined based on age; PS; cytogenetics risk; prior HCT; and time from last therapy. However OS was significantly worse in patients with PS 2 (p<0.001); patient with poor risk cytogenetics (p<0.001); and those with <6 months from last therapy (p=0.015). Safety was acceptable in all doses and schedules, the most common Grade ≥3 AEs regardless of relationship to therapy were febrile neutropenia (60%), pneumonia and thrombocytopenia (36% each), and anemia (31%). All-cause early mortality was relatively low for this patient population with 3.8% at 30 days and 11.6% at 60 days in all guadecitabine treated patients with no higher mortality with the 10-day initial intensification regimen. Conclusions: Guadecitabine showed good clinically activity in terms of CRc with acceptable safety profile in r/r AML patients with various standard poor prognostic factors. CRc with guadecitabine was associated with longer survival. While CRc was observed in all subgroups, patients with poor PS; poor risk cytogenetics; or with short time from last therapy had significantly worse survival. A randomized phase 3 study is being initiated with guadecitabine using the 10-day initial intensification regimen vs Treatment Choice in r/r AML patients. Disclosures Daver: Sunesis: Consultancy, Research Funding; Ariad: Research Funding; Karyopharm: Honoraria, Research Funding; Pfizer: Consultancy, Research Funding; BMS: Research Funding; Kiromic: Research Funding; Otsuka: Consultancy, Honoraria. Kantarjian:Amgen: Research Funding; Bristol-Myers Squibb: Research Funding; ARIAD: Research Funding; Pfizer Inc: Research Funding; Delta-Fly Pharma: Research Funding; Novartis: Research Funding. Roboz:Cellectis: Research Funding; Agios, Amgen, Amphivena, Astex, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celator, Celgene, Genoptix, Janssen, Juno, MEI Pharma, MedImmune, Novartis, Onconova, Pfizer, Roche/Genentech, Sunesis, Teva: Consultancy. Kropf:Celgene: Consultancy; Takeda: Consultancy. Yee:Novartis Canada: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding. Jabbour:ARIAD: Consultancy, Research Funding; Pfizer: Consultancy, Research Funding; Novartis: Research Funding; BMS: Consultancy. Berdeja:Abbvie, Acetylon, Amgen, Bluebird, BMS, Calithera, Celgene, Constellation, Curis, Epizyme, Janssen, Karyopharm, Kesios, Novartis, Onyx, Takeda, Tragara: Research Funding. Su:Astex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: Employment. Azab:Astex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: Employment. Issa:Astex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: Consultancy; Teva: Consultancy.


2012 ◽  
Vol 23 ◽  
pp. ix370
Author(s):  
D. Lee ◽  
L. Pericleous ◽  
M. Lebmeier ◽  
B. Winn ◽  
A. Batty ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 10013-10013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georgina V. Long ◽  
Jacob Schachter ◽  
Ana Arance ◽  
Jean-Jacques Grob ◽  
Laurent Mortier ◽  
...  

10013 Background: 5-year follow-up of the phase 3 KEYNOTE-006 study (NCT01866319) showed pembro improved OS vs ipilimumab (ipi) in patients (pts) with advanced melanoma. 3-y OS rate from pembro completion for pts who completed 2 y of pembro was 93.8%. Results with 8 mo of additional follow-up are presented to inform clinical care. Methods: Eligible pts with ipi-naive advanced melanoma, ≤1 prior therapy for BRAF-mutant disease, and ECOG PS 0 or 1 were randomized to pembro 10 mg/kg Q2W or Q3W for ≤2 y or ipi 3 mg/kg Q3W for 4 doses. Pts discontinuing pembro with CR, PR, or SD after ≥94 weeks were considered pts with 2-y pembro. Pts who stopped pembro with SD, PR or CR could receive ≤12 mo of additional pembro (2nd course) upon disease progression if still eligible. ORR was assessed per immune-related response criteria by investigator review. OS was estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Pembro arm data were pooled. Post hoc ITT efficacy analyses are shown. Results: Median follow-up from randomization to data cutoff (Jul 31, 2019) was 66.7 mo in the pembro and 66.9 mo in the ipi arms. OS outcomes are shown in Table. For the 103 pts with 2-y pembro (30 CR, 63 PR, 10 SD), median follow-up from completion was 42.9 mo (95% CI, 39.9-46.3).Median DOR was not reached. 36-mo OS from pembro completion was 100% (95% CI, 100.0-100.0) for pts with CR, 94.8% (95% CI, 84.7-98.3) for pts with PR, and 66.7% (95% CI, 28.2-87.8) for pts with SD. 15 pts received 2nd-course pembro; BOR in 1st course was 6 CR, 6 PR, and 3 SD. Median time from end of 1st course to start of 2ndcourse was 24.5 mo (range, 4.9-41.4). Median follow-up in pts who received 2nd-course pembro was 25.3 mo (range, 3.5-39.4). Median duration of 2nd-course pembro was 8.3 mo (range, 1.4-12.6). BOR on 2ndcourse was 3 CR, 5 PR (ongoing responses, 7 pts), 3 SD (ongoing, 2 pts), and 2 PD (1 death); 2 pts pending. Conclusions: Pembro improves the long-term survival vs ipi in pts with advanced melanoma, with all pts who completed therapy in CR still alive at 5 years. Retreatment with pembro at progression in pts who stopped at SD or better can provide additional clinical benefit in a majority of pts. Clinical trial information: NCT01866319. [Table: see text]


2014 ◽  
Vol 40 (9) ◽  
pp. 1056-1064 ◽  
Author(s):  
David McDermott ◽  
Celeste Lebbé ◽  
F. Stephen Hodi ◽  
Michele Maio ◽  
Jeffrey S. Weber ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e21522-e21522
Author(s):  
Bixia Tang ◽  
Zhihong Chi ◽  
Yingbo Chen ◽  
Xiufeng Liu ◽  
Di Wu ◽  
...  

e21522 Background: Toripalimab, a PD-1 monoclonal antibody received conditionally approval in China as a salvage therapy for metastatic melanoma in 2018 based on a phase II trial with confirmed objective response rate of 17.3%. With four-year survival follow-up, here we report long-term survival results and related predictive biomarkers (NCT03013101). Methods: Patients with advanced melanoma who had failed prior systemic treatments were given toripalimab at 3 mg/kg i.v. Q2W until disease progression, intolerable toxicity or 2-year of treatment. Pts were followed for survival every 3 mo after discontinuation of treatment. Pts were transferred to an extension study after 2-year treatment. The Primary endpoint for the extension study was overall survival (OS). Results: 127 pts were enrolled, including50 (39.4%) acral, 22 (17.3%) mucosal, 29 (22.9%) nonacral cutaneous, and 26 (20.5%) unknown primary subtypes. After a median follow-up of 16.5 mo (range, 0.9-48.8), 74 (58%) pts had died. Median duration of response was 25.6 mo (95%CI:12.8-NE). Median OS was 22.0 mo (95%CI: 15.3-32.5). The OS rates for year 1 to 4 were 67.1%, 48.2%, 38.0% and 31.7% respectively. The median OS of complete response (CR)/ partial response (PR) (n = 22), stable disease (SD) (n = 51), progression disease (PD) (n = 54) were not reached, 34.0 mo and 9.7 mo, respectively. The median OS of non-acral cutaneous, unknown primary, acral and mucosal melanoma subtypes were 46.1, 37.3, 16.9 and 10.3 mo, respectively. The median OS of PD-L1+ (n = 26) and PD-L1- (n = 84) patients were 46.1 and 14.4 mo (P = 0.026, HR = 0.45, 95%CI 0.26-0.76). The median OS of TMB high (n = 20), TMB low (n = 78) was 16.0 and 22.3 mo with no statistically significance (P = 0.49, HR = 1.28, 95%CI 0.63-2.58). Conclusions: Salvage treatment with toripalimab leads to long-term survival benefit in advanced melanoma patients, especially for those with non-acral cutaneous and unknown primary subtypes, CR/PR/SD as best response or PD-L1+.


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