6533b827fe1ef96bd1285b4b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Pretreatment metastatic growth rate determines clinical outcome of advanced melanoma patients treated with anti-PD-1 antibodies: a multicenter cohort study

Ramon StägerSuzan StürmerCarola BerkingCarola BerkingPhilipp GussekFiona AndréAmadeus SchraagChiara EbelMax M LendersLydia ReinhardtLukas FlatzLukas FlatzStefan DiemRoland LangMartin RöckenSusanne KimeswengerMirjana ZiemerGeorg RichtigMilena DuddaUlrike LeiterJ. ManganaBernhard KlumppThomas EigentlerChristoffer GebhardtMichael PaarClaus GarbeVan Anh NguyenBenjamin WeidePatrick TerheydenMaximilian GassenmaierAntonio CozzioAndrea ForschnerFriedegund MeierWolfram HoetzeneckerCarmen LoquaiAngela OellingerKathrin KühlCaroline ZellwegerNikolaus B. WagnerErika RichtigNatalie Ring

subject

Male0301 basic medicineOncologyCancer ResearchSkin NeoplasmsTime Factors2437Programmed Cell Death 1 ReceptorPembrolizumabMetastasis0302 clinical medicineRisk FactorsImmunotherapy BiomarkersImmunology and Allergy1506Immune Checkpoint InhibitorsRC254-282MelanomaNeoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogensMiddle Agedddc:EuropeNivolumabTreatment OutcomeOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCohortMolecular MedicineFemaleimmunotherapyNivolumabCohort studytumormedicine.medical_specialtyImmunologyAntibodies Monoclonal HumanizedRisk Assessment03 medical and health sciencesPredictive Value of TestsInternal medicinemelanomamedicineHumansCell ProliferationNeoplasm StagingRetrospective StudiesPharmacologyProportional hazards modelbusiness.industrybiomarkersReproducibility of Resultsmedicine.disease030104 developmental biologyTomography X-Ray ComputedbusinessBrain metastasis

description

BackgroundCheckpoint inhibitors revolutionized the treatment of metastatic melanoma patients. Although tumor burden and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) are associated with overall survival (OS), the impact of tumor growth kinetics remains elusive and in part contradictory. The aims of this study were to develop a novel simple and rapid method that estimates pretreatment metastatic growth rate (MGR) and to investigate its prognostic impact in melanoma patients treated with antiprogrammed death receptor-1 (PD-1) antibodies.MethodsMGR was assessed in three independent cohorts of a total of 337 unselected consecutive metastasized stage IIIB–IV melanoma patients (discovery cohort: n=53, confirmation cohort: n=126, independent multicenter validation cohort: n=158). MGR was computed during the pretreatment period before initiation of therapy with anti-PD-1 antibodies nivolumab or pembrolizumab by measuring the increase of the longest diameter of the largest target lesion. Tumor doubling time served as quality control. Kaplan-Meier analysis and univariable as well as multivariable Cox regression were used to examine the prognostic impact of MGR.ResultsPretreatment MGR >3.9 mm/month was associated with impaired OS in the discovery cohort (HR 6.19, 95% CI 2.92 to 13.10, p<0.0001), in the confirmation cohort (HR 3.62, 95% CI 2.19 to 5.98, p<0.0001) and in the independent validation cohort (HR 2.57, 95% CI 1.56 to 4.25, p=0.00023). Prior lines of systemic treatment did not influence the significance of MGR. Importantly, the prognostic impact of MGR was independent of total tumor burden, diameter of the largest metastasis, number of prior lines of systemic treatment, LDH, as well as liver and brain metastasis (discovery and confirmation cohorts: both p<0.0001). Superiority of MGR compared with these variables was confirmed in the independent multicenter validation cohort (HR 2.92, 95% CI 1.62 to 5.26, p=0.00036).ConclusionsHigh pretreatment MGR is an independent strong prognostic biomarker associated with unfavorable survival of melanoma patients receiving anti-PD-1 antibodies. Further investigations are warranted to assess the predictive impact of MGR in distinct systemic therapeutic regimens.

10.1136/jitc-2021-002350https://mediatum.ub.tum.de/doc/1653380/document.pdf