Publication

Association between Immune-Related Adverse Events and Survival in 319 Stage IV Melanoma Patients Treated with PD-1-Based Immunotherapy: An Approach Based on Clinical Chemistry

Journal Paper/Review - Dec 6, 2021

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Serna-Higuita L, Eigentler T, Garbe C, Thomas I, Seeber O, Flatz L, Leiter U, Forschner A, Amaral T, Martus P. Association between Immune-Related Adverse Events and Survival in 319 Stage IV Melanoma Patients Treated with PD-1-Based Immunotherapy: An Approach Based on Clinical Chemistry. Cancers (Basel) 2021; 13
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Cancers (Basel) 2021; 13
Publication Date
Dec 6, 2021
Issn Print
2072-6694
Brief description/objective

(1) Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors have improved the prognosis of patients with advanced melanoma. Published data suggested that the objective response rates appear to be superior in patients who developed immune-related adverse events (irAEs). (2) The primary aim of this cohort study was to evaluate the association between irAEs and disease control rate in patients with stage IV melanoma treated with first-line PD-1-based immunotherapy. (3) Among 319 patients, 53% experienced at least one irAE. A higher percentage of patients with irAEs had disease control compared to those without irAEs (69.8% vs. 49.3%). In multivariate analysis, development of grade 3 and 4 irAEs was significantly associated with a protective effect for the outcome primary resistance (OR: 0.40 95% CI 0.23-0.70, = 0.001). The presence of any grade irAEs was significantly associated with longer OS (irAEs grade 1-2 HRadj: 0.61 95% CI: 0.4-0.93, = 0.02, irAEs grade 3-4 HRadj: 0.55 95% CI 0.31-0.99, = 0.04), but not with PFS (irAEs grade 1-2 HRadj: 1.21 95% CI: 0.91-1.79, = 0.16, irAEs grade 3-4 HRadj: 1.14 95% CI 0.83-2.02, = 0.24). (4) The presence of irAEs with laboratorial expression is positively associated with response and OS, suggesting that irAEs might be a predictive factor in this setting.