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Outcomes of anti-PD-(L1) therapy in combination with chemotherapy versus immunotherapy (IO) alone for first-line (1L) treatment of advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with PD-L1 score 1-49%: FDA pooled analysis.

Oladimeji Akinboro, Jonathon Vallejo, Pallavi S. Mishra‐Kalyani, Erin Larkins, Nicole Drezner, Shenghui Tang, Richard Pazdur, Julia A. Beaver, Harpreet Singh

2021Journal of Clinical Oncology49 citationsDOI

Abstract

9001 Background: IO + chemotherapy ± anti-angiogenics comprise FDA-approved 1L regimens for metastatic NSCLC, with IO-only therapy approved only for PD-L1-positive NSCLC. Patients with PD-L1 scores 1-49% have many therapeutic options, and little is known about how subgroups of patients experience benefit across treatment regimens. Methods: Data was pooled from 8 randomized controlled trials investigating anti-PD-(L)1 therapy as IO-only or in chemo-IO regimens for the 1L treatment of patients with advanced NSCLC. PD-L1 score was defined as the proportion of tumor cells stained by the assay, and analysis was conducted for patients whose tumors had PD-L1 score 1-49%. Tumor-infiltrating immune cell staining was not considered. OS and PFS were compared between chemo-IO and IO alone via a pooled analysis. Median survival times were estimated using Kaplan-Meier methods. Hazard ratios were estimated using Cox proportional hazards models stratified by trial and adjusted for age, sex, race, ECOG, histology and smoking status. Results: A total of 2108 patients with NSCLC and PD-L1 score 1-49% were identified for this analysis. Baseline characteristics were: 37% aged 65-74 years and 12% aged ≥75; 67% male; 79% white; 65% ECOG ≥ 1; and 85% smokers. Median follow-up was 12.1 months. This pooled analysis showed that patients receiving chemo-IO (N=639) had longer PFS and OS compared to patients treated with IO alone (N=529), with median PFS 7.7 vs 4.2 months (HR 0.60; 95% CI 0.48, 0.76) and median OS 21.4 vs 14.5 months (HR 0.68; 95% CI 0.52, 0.90). All results presented are considered exploratory and hypothesis generating. Conclusions: This exploratory pooled analysis suggests that chemo-IO may improve efficacy outcomes over IO alone in most subgroups of patients with advanced NSCLC with PD-L1 score 1-49%. Patients 75 and over experienced similar outcomes across therapeutic options.[Table: see text]

Topics & Concepts

MedicineInternal medicineHazard ratioLung cancerChemotherapyOncologyProportional hazards modelnon-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)Performance statusImmunotherapyCancerConfidence intervalA549 cellCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersLung Cancer Research StudiesBladder and Urothelial Cancer Treatments