Durable Clinical Benefit in Patients with Advanced Cutaneous Melanoma after Discontinuation of Anti-PD-1 Therapies Due to Immune-Related Adverse Events

Joint Authors

Swami, Umang
Zakharia, Yousef
Milhem, Mohammed
Monga, Varun
Bossler, Aaron D.

Source

Journal of Oncology

Issue

Vol. 2019, Issue 2019 (31 Dec. 2019), pp.1-7, 7 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2019-07-25

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

7

Main Subjects

Diseases
Medicine

Abstract EN

Introduction.

Anti-PD-1 therapies, pembrolizumab and nivolumab, are currently the standard of care for treatment of patients with metastatic melanoma.

Treatment is usually continued until toxicity or disease progression.

Though these therapies are well tolerated, some patients discontinue them due to immune-related adverse events (irAE).

Discontinuation of therapy brings challenges to their management due to limited treatment options and lack of long-term prognostic information for these patients.

Herein, we reviewed patients at our institution to analyze their clinical outcomes.

Materials and Methods.

Charts of 1264 consecutive patients enrolled between 8/1/2012 and 7/31/2017 at Melanoma Skin & Ocular Tissue Repositories at Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinic were reviewed.

Eligible patients were those who received single-agent anti-PD-1 therapy and subsequently discontinued it due to irAE.

Reviewed data included patient demographics, prior medical history, baseline disease parameters, and outcomes.

Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was done to determine progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS).

Results.

Overall 169 patients with advanced, unresectable, or metastatic cutaneous melanoma received anti-PD-1 therapy of which 16 (9.5%) white, non-Hispanic patients with median age of 64.5 (range 35 to 81 years) discontinued treatment due to irAE.

Fifteen patients received pembrolizumab and one received nivolumab.

The median duration of treatment was 4.7 (range 0.7 to 11.5) months.

Median follow-up was 30.3 (range 4.6 to 49.4) months.

Median PFS was 24.6 months and median OS was not reached.

Durable clinical benefit (time to progression or next treatment of more than 6 months from last treatment) was observed in 13 (81.2%) patients.

At the time of analysis, 8 patients had progressed and 4 patients died (all-cause).

Discussion.

Our results suggest that advanced melanoma patients discontinuing anti-PD-1 therapy due to irAE usually experience durable clinical benefit.

However, caution is needed with these agents in patients with underlying autoimmune diseases.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Swami, Umang& Monga, Varun& Bossler, Aaron D.& Zakharia, Yousef& Milhem, Mohammed. 2019. Durable Clinical Benefit in Patients with Advanced Cutaneous Melanoma after Discontinuation of Anti-PD-1 Therapies Due to Immune-Related Adverse Events. Journal of Oncology،Vol. 2019, no. 2019, pp.1-7.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1183985

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Swami, Umang…[et al.]. Durable Clinical Benefit in Patients with Advanced Cutaneous Melanoma after Discontinuation of Anti-PD-1 Therapies Due to Immune-Related Adverse Events. Journal of Oncology No. 2019 (2019), pp.1-7.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1183985

American Medical Association (AMA)

Swami, Umang& Monga, Varun& Bossler, Aaron D.& Zakharia, Yousef& Milhem, Mohammed. Durable Clinical Benefit in Patients with Advanced Cutaneous Melanoma after Discontinuation of Anti-PD-1 Therapies Due to Immune-Related Adverse Events. Journal of Oncology. 2019. Vol. 2019, no. 2019, pp.1-7.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1183985

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1183985