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Efficacy and Safety of Adjuvant Nivolumab in Patients With Completely Resected Merkel Cell Carcinoma
abstract
This abstract is available on the publisher's site.
Access this abstract now Full Text Available for ClinicalKey SubscribersBACKGROUND
Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is an immunogenic but aggressive skin cancer. Even after complete resection and radiation, relapse rates are high. PD-1 and PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitors showed clinical benefit in advanced MCC. We aimed to assess efficacy and safety of adjuvant immune checkpoint inhibition in completely resected MCC (ie, a setting without an established systemic standard-of-care treatment).
METHODS
In this multicentre phase 2 trial, patients (any stage, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status 0-1) at 20 academic medical centres in Germany and the Netherlands with completely resected MCC lesions were randomly assigned 2:1 to receive nivolumab 480 mg every 4 weeks for 1 year, or observation, stratified by stage (American Joint Committee on Cancer stages 1-2 vs stages 3-4), age (<65 vs ≥65 years), and sex. Landmark disease-free survival (DFS) at 12 and 24 months was the primary endpoint, assessed in the intention-to-treat populations. Overall survival and safety were secondary endpoints. This planned interim analysis was triggered when the last-patient-in was followed up for more than 1 year. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02196961) and with the EU Clinical Trials Register (2013-000043-78).
FINDINGS
Between Oct 1, 2014, and Aug 31, 2020, 179 patients were enrolled (116 [65%] stage 3-4, 122 [68%] ≥65 years, 111 [62%] male). Stratification factors (stage, age, sex) were balanced across the nivolumab (n=118) and internal control group (observation, n=61); adjuvant radiotherapy was more common in the control group. At a median follow-up of 24·3 months (IQR 19·2-33·4), median DFS was not reached (between-groups hazard ratio 0·58, 95% CI 0·30-1·12); DFS rates in the nivolumab group were 85% at 12 months and 84% at 24 months, and in the observation group were 77% at 12 months and 73% at 24 months. Overall survival results were not yet mature. Grade 3-4 adverse events occurred in 48 [42%] of 115 patients who received at least one dose of nivolumab and seven [11%] of 61 patients in the observation group. No treatment-related deaths were reported.
INTERPRETATION
Adjuvant therapy with nivolumab resulted in an absolute risk reduction of 9% (1-year DFS) and 10% (2-year DFS). The present interim analysis of ADMEC-O might suggest clinical use of nivolumab in this area of unmet medical need. However, overall survival events rates, with ten events in the active treatment group and six events in the half-the-size observation group, are not mature enough to draw conclusions. The explorative data of our trial support the continuation of ongoing, randomised trials in this area. ADMEC-O suggests that adjuvant immunotherapy is clinically feasible in this area of unmet medical need.
FUNDING
Bristol Myers Squibb.
Additional Info
Disclosure statements are available on the authors' profiles:
Adjuvant immunotherapy with nivolumab versus observation in completely resected Merkel cell carcinoma (ADMEC-O): disease-free survival results from a randomised, open-label, phase 2 trial
Lancet 2023 Jul 11;[EPub Ahead of Print], JC Becker, S Ugurel, U Leiter, F Meier, R Gutzmer, S Haferkamp, L Zimmer, E Livingstone, TK Eigentler, A Hauschild, F Kiecker, JC Hassel, P Mohr, M Fluck, I Thomas, M Garzarolli, I Grimmelmann, K Drexler, AN Spillner, S Eckhardt, D SchadendorfFrom MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) recurs in 40% of patients following optimal management by surgery and radiation. Based on stage, immune suppression, and sex (men fare more poorly), the recurrence risk can be as high as 80%1; yet, there are no approved adjuvant therapies for this aggressive skin cancer. This helps to explain why there is anticipation for such a trial in this space.
Because MCC is at least as responsive as melanoma in the setting of first-line immunotherapy, the anticipated effect of adjuvant therapy was about a 50% decrease in the rate of recurrence.
Despite not achieving statistical significance, this study by Becker et al is important as it is the first prospective study of adjuvant immune checkpoint inhibition in patients with completely resected MCC and has an effect size that is nearly as large as anticipated (a 42% relative decrease; HR, 0.58; 95% CI, 0.30–1.12).
This finding tends to support the presumption that adjuvant immunotherapy will have efficacy in MCC. However, it leaves many questions unanswered due to the lack of statistical significance, slightly more modest effect size observed, and uncertainty regarding how recurrence-free survival would relate to overall survival among these patients. The bottom line is that, while encouraging, data from additional trials of adjuvant PD-1 pathway blockade will be needed before it is clear how adjuvant immunotherapy should be integrated into MCC management.
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