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239 Efficacy and toxicity of single agent immune checkpoint inhibitors among adults with cancer aged ≥80 years: a multicenter international cohort study

Authors :
Alessio Cortellini
Douglas B. Johnson
Amin Nassar
Sebastiano Buti
Pamela Pizzutilo
Fei Ye
Shravanti Macherla
David J. Pinato
Asrar Alahmadi
Giuseppe Lamberti
Anwaar Saeed
Ella Daniels
Paolo A. Ascierto
Carolyn J Presley
Sarah Abou Alaiwi
Melissa Bersanelli
Maluki Radford
Foteini Kalofonou
Tamara A. Sussman
Akiva Diamond
Maria Giovanna Dal Bello
Christopher J. Hoimes
Paolo Marchetti
Domenico Mallardo
Weijie Ma
Rebecca Irlmeier
Teja Ganta
Raffaele Giusti
Andrea Botticelli
Neha Debnath
Caroline A. Nebhan
Carlo Genova
Toni K. Choueiri
Biagio Ricciuti
Abdul Rafeh Naqash
Nikhil H. Ramaiya
Annamaria Catino
Haocan Song
Vito Vanella
Marco Filetti
Yinghong Wang
Thomas U. Marron
Chiara Casartelli
Dwight H. Owen
Domenico Galetta
Source :
Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer, Vol 9, Iss Suppl 2 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2021.

Abstract

BackgroundImmune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are approved by the U.S. Food&Drug Administration in over 17 tumor types. Older adult patients make up about a quarter of all cancer patients but are historically understudied in cancer clinical trials. ICIs are associated with immune-related adverse events (irAEs), which may be particularly morbid for older adult patients with underlying comorbidities and impaired functional status. In this study, we provide insight into the real-world safety and efficacy of ICIs among older adult patients (≥80 years) with cancer.MethodsThis is a multicenter, international retrospective study of tumor-agnostic older adult patients with cancer treated with single-agent ICIs between 2010–2019 from 18 academic centers in the U.S. and Europe. A cohort of 928 patients aged ≥80 years during treatment with ICI was assembled and analyzed to evaluate clinical outcomes and irAE patterns in older adult patients treated with single-agent ICIs.ResultsMedian age at ICI initiation was 83.0 years (range 75.8–97.0). Most patients (86.9%) were treated with anti-PD-1 therapy. Among the full cohort, the three most common tumors were non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC, 37.2%,n=345), melanoma (35.5%,n=329), and genitourinary (GU) tumors (16.5%,n=153). Objective response rates for patients with NSCLC, melanoma, and GU tumors were 32.2%, 39.3%, and 26.2%, respectively. Median progression-free survival (PFS) was 6.7 months (95%CI, 5.2–8.6) for patients with NSCLC, 11.1 months (95%CI, 8.9–16.0) for patients with melanoma, and 6.0 months (95% CI, 5.0–10.7) for patients with GU malignancy. Median overall survival (OS) was 10.9 months (95%CI, 8.6–13.1) for patients with NSCLC, 30.0 months (95%CI, 23.6–46.4) for patients with melanoma, and 15.0 months (95%CI 9.1–25.4) for GU patients (Figure 1A-C). Within histology-specific cohorts (NSCLC, melanoma and GU), clinical outcomes were similar across age subgroups (90). Among all patients (N=928), 41.3% experienced ≥1 irAE(s), including 12.2% reported to be grade (G)3–4. No irAE-related deaths occurred. The median time to irAE onset was 9.8 weeks; 57% occurred within the first 3 months after ICI initiation. ICI was discontinued due to irAEs in 16.1% patients. There was no significant difference in the rate of irAEs among patients age ConclusionsICIs are effective and generally well-tolerated among older patients with cancer. However, ICI discontinuation due to irAE is more frequent with increasing age.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20511426
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....237db964ee2997e12a427dc9eb82a6ab