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Evaluation of Immune-Related Response Criteria and RECIST v1.1 in Patients With Advanced Melanoma Treated With Pembrolizumab

Authors :
Jeffrey S. Weber
Dahai Xue
Amita Patnaik
Darcy A. Hille
Xiaoyun Nicole Li
Richard F. Kefford
Roxana S. Dronca
Andrea Marie Perrone
F. Stephen Hodi
S. Peter Kang
Tara C. Gangadhar
Omid Hamid
Scot Ebbinghaus
Wen-Jen Hwu
Peter Hersey
Richard W. Joseph
Antoni Ribas
Adil Daud
Anthony M. Joshua
Jedd D. Wolchok
Caroline Robert
Source :
Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, vol 34, iss 13
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2016.

Abstract

Purpose We evaluated atypical response patterns and the relationship between overall survival and best overall response measured per immune-related response criteria (irRC) and Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors, version 1.1 (RECIST v1.1) in patients with advanced melanoma treated with pembrolizumab in the phase Ib KEYNOTE-001 study (clinical trial information: NCT01295827). Patients and Methods Patients received pembrolizumab 2 or 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks or every 3 weeks. Atypical responses were identified by using centrally assessed irRC data in patients with ≥ 28 weeks of imaging. Pseudoprogression was defined as ≥ 25% increase in tumor burden at week 12 (early) or any assessment after week 12 (delayed) that was not confirmed as progressive disease at next assessment. Response was assessed centrally per irRC and RECIST v1.1. Results Of the 655 patients with melanoma enrolled, 327 had ≥ 28 weeks of imaging follow-up. Twenty-four (7%) of these 327 patients had atypical responses (15 [5%] with early pseudoprogression and nine [3%] with delayed pseudoprogression). Of the 592 patients who survived ≥ 12 weeks, 84 (14%) experienced progressive disease per RECIST v1.1 but nonprogressive disease per irRC. Two-year overall survival rates were 77.6% in patients with nonprogressive disease per both criteria (n = 331), 37.5% in patients with progressive disease per RECIST v1.1 but nonprogressive disease per irRC (n = 84), and 17.3% in patients with progressive disease per both criteria (n = 177). Conclusion Atypical responses were observed in patients with melanoma treated with pembrolizumab. Based on survival analysis, conventional RECIST might underestimate the benefit of pembrolizumab in approximately 15% of patients; modified criteria that permit treatment beyond initial progression per RECIST v1.1 might prevent premature cessation of treatment.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, vol 34, iss 13
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6d0e1a14bcec35f0bafe4d5ea7bd43ca