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Neoadjuvant Durvalumab Alone or Combined with Novel Immuno-Oncology Agents in Resectable Lung Cancer: The Phase II NeoCOAST Platform Trial.

Authors :
Cascone T
Kar G
Spicer JD
García-Campelo R
Weder W
Daniel DB
Spigel DR
Hussein M
Mazieres J
Oliveira J
Yau EH
Spira AI
Anagnostou V
Mager R
Hamid O
Cheng LY
Zheng Y
Blando J
Tan TH
Surace M
Rodriguez-Canales J
Gopalakrishnan V
Sellman BR
Grenga I
Soo-Hoo Y
Kumar R
McGrath L
Forde PM
Source :
Cancer discovery [Cancer Discov] 2023 Nov 01; Vol. 13 (11), pp. 2394-2411.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy improves pathologic complete response rate and event-free survival in patients with resectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) versus chemotherapy alone. NeoCOAST was the first randomized, multidrug platform trial to examine novel neoadjuvant immuno-oncology combinations for patients with resectable NSCLC, using major pathologic response (MPR) rate as the primary endpoint. Eighty-three patients received a single cycle of treatment: 26 received durvalumab (anti-PD-L1) monotherapy, 21 received durvalumab plus oleclumab (anti-CD73), 20 received durvalumab plus monalizumab (anti-NKG2A), and 16 received durvalumab plus danvatirsen (anti-STAT3 antisense oligonucleotide). MPR rates were higher for patients in the combination arms versus durvalumab alone. Safety profiles for the combinations were similar to those of durvalumab alone. Multiplatform immune profiling suggested that improved MPR rates in the durvalumab plus oleclumab and durvalumab plus monalizumab arms were associated with enhanced effector immune infiltration of tumors, interferon responses and markers of tertiary lymphoid structure formation, and systemic functional immune cell activation.<br />Significance: A neoadjuvant platform trial can rapidly generate clinical and translational data using candidate surrogate endpoints like MPR. In NeoCOAST, patients with resectable NSCLC had improved MPR rates after durvalumab plus oleclumab or monalizumab versus durvalumab alone and tumoral transcriptomic signatures indicative of augmented immune cell activation and function. See related commentary by Cooper and Yu, p. 2306. This article is featured in Selected Articles from This Issue, p. 2293.<br /> (©2023 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2159-8290
Volume :
13
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer discovery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37707791
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.CD-23-0436