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PD-1 Blockade in Tumors with Mismatch-Repair Deficiency
9.362
Zitationen
35
Autoren
2015
Jahr
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Somatic mutations have the potential to encode "non-self" immunogenic antigens. We hypothesized that tumors with a large number of somatic mutations due to mismatch-repair defects may be susceptible to immune checkpoint blockade. METHODS: We conducted a phase 2 study to evaluate the clinical activity of pembrolizumab, an anti-programmed death 1 immune checkpoint inhibitor, in 41 patients with progressive metastatic carcinoma with or without mismatch-repair deficiency. Pembrolizumab was administered intravenously at a dose of 10 mg per kilogram of body weight every 14 days in patients with mismatch repair-deficient colorectal cancers, patients with mismatch repair-proficient colorectal cancers, and patients with mismatch repair-deficient cancers that were not colorectal. The coprimary end points were the immune-related objective response rate and the 20-week immune-related progression-free survival rate. RESULTS: The immune-related objective response rate and immune-related progression-free survival rate were 40% (4 of 10 patients) and 78% (7 of 9 patients), respectively, for mismatch repair-deficient colorectal cancers and 0% (0 of 18 patients) and 11% (2 of 18 patients) for mismatch repair-proficient colorectal cancers. The median progression-free survival and overall survival were not reached in the cohort with mismatch repair-deficient colorectal cancer but were 2.2 and 5.0 months, respectively, in the cohort with mismatch repair-proficient colorectal cancer (hazard ratio for disease progression or death, 0.10 [P<0.001], and hazard ratio for death, 0.22 [P=0.05]). Patients with mismatch repair-deficient noncolorectal cancer had responses similar to those of patients with mismatch repair-deficient colorectal cancer (immune-related objective response rate, 71% [5 of 7 patients]; immune-related progression-free survival rate, 67% [4 of 6 patients]). Whole-exome sequencing revealed a mean of 1782 somatic mutations per tumor in mismatch repair-deficient tumors, as compared with 73 in mismatch repair-proficient tumors (P=0.007), and high somatic mutation loads were associated with prolonged progression-free survival (P=0.02). CONCLUSIONS: This study showed that mismatch-repair status predicted clinical benefit of immune checkpoint blockade with pembrolizumab. (Funded by Johns Hopkins University and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01876511.).
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Autoren
- Dung T. Le
- Jennifer N. Uram
- Hao Wang
- Bjarne R. Bartlett
- Holly Kemberling
- Aleksandra Eyring
- Andrew D. Skora
- Brandon Luber
- Nilofer S. Azad
- Dan Laheru
- Barbara Biedrzycki
- Ross C. Donehower
- Atif Zaheer
- George A. Fisher
- Todd S. Crocenzi
- James J. Lee
- Steven M. Duffy
- Richard M. Goldberg
- Albert de la Chapelle
- Minori Koshiji
- Feriyl Bhaijee
- Thomas Huebner
- Ralph H. Hruban
- Laura D. Wood
- Nathan Cuka
- Drew M. Pardoll
- Nickolas Papadopoulos
- Kenneth W. Kinzler
- Shibin Zhou
- Toby C. Cornish
- Janis M. Taube
- Robert A. Anders
- James R. Eshleman
- Bert Vogelstein
- Luis A. Díaz
Institutionen
- Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center(US)
- Swim Across America(US)
- Howard Hughes Medical Institute(US)
- Johns Hopkins University(US)
- Johns Hopkins Medicine(US)
- Stanford University(US)
- Providence Health & Services(US)
- UPMC Hillman Cancer Center(US)
- Virginia Cancer Institute(US)
- Cancer Genetics (United States)(US)
- The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute(US)
- Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, NJ, USA (United States)(US)