PURPOSE We assessed the prognostic/predictive role of primary tumor sidedness and uncommon alterations of anti–epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) primary resistance (primary resistance in RAS and BRAF wild-type metastatic colorectal cancer patients treated with anti-EGFR monoclonal antibodies [PRESSING] panel) in patients with RAS/ BRAF wild-type (wt) metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) who were randomly assigned to panitumumab plus fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX-4) induction followed by maintenance with panitumumab with or without fluorouracil (FU) plus leucovorin (LV); Valentino trial (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02476045 ). PATIENTS AND METHODS This prespecified retrospective analysis included 199 evaluable patients with RAS/ BRAF wt. The PRESSING panel included the following: immunohistochemistry (IHC) and in situ hybridization for HER2/MET amplification, IHC with or without RNA sequencing for ALK/ROS1/NTRKs/RET fusions, next-generation sequencing for HER2/ PIK3CAex.20/PTEN/ AKT1 and RAS mutations with low mutant allele fraction, and multiplex polymerase chain reaction for microsatellite instability. PRESSING status (any positive biomarker v all negative) and sidedness were correlated with overall response rate (ORR), progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS) in the study population and by treatment arm. RESULTS Overall, left- and right-sided tumors were 85.4% and 14.6%, respectively, and PRESSING-negative and -positive tumors were 75.4% and 24.6%, respectively. At a median follow-up of 26 months, inferior outcomes were consistently observed in right- versus left-sided tumors for ORR (55.2% v 74.1%; P = .037), PFS (8.4 v 11.5 months; P = .026), and OS (2-year rate: 50.2% v 65.1%; P = .062). Similar results were observed in the PRESSING-positive versus PRESSING-negative subgroup for ORR (59.2% v 75.3%; P = .030), PFS (7.7 v 12.1 months; P < .001), and OS (2-year rate: 48.1% v 68.1%; P = .021). The PFS benefit of FU plus LV added to panitumumab maintenance, reported in the study, was independent from sidedness and PRESSING status (interaction for PFS P = .293 and .127, respectively). However, outcomes were extremely poor in patients who received single-agent panitumumab and had right-sided tumors (median PFS, 7.7 months; 2-year OS, 38.5%) or PRESSING-positive tumors (median PFS, 7.4 months; 2-year OS, 47.0%). CONCLUSION The combined assessment of sidedness and molecular alterations of anti-EGFR primary resistance identified a consistent proportion of patients with RAS/ BRAF–wt mCRC who had inferior benefit from initial anti-EGFR–based regimens, particularly after maintenance with single-agent anti-EGFRs.
PURPOSE This is a multicenter, single-arm phase II trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of an immune-sensitizing strategy with temozolomide priming followed by a combination of low-dose ipilimumab and nivolumab in patients with microsatellite-stable (MSS) and O6-methylguanine–DNA methyltransferase (MGMT)–silenced metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients with pretreated mCRC were centrally prescreened for MSS status and MGMT silencing (ie, lack of MGMT expression by immunohistochemistry plus MGMT methylation by pyrosequencing). Eligible patients received two priming cycles of oral temozolomide 150 mg/sqm once daily, days 1-5, once every 4 weeks (first treatment part) followed, in absence of progression, by its combination with ipilimumab 1 mg/kg once every 8 weeks and nivolumab 480 mg once every 4 weeks (second treatment part). The primary end point was the 8-month progression-free survival (PFS) rate calculated from enrollment in patients who started the second treatment part, with ≥ 4 out of 27 subjects progression-free by the 8-month time point as decision rule. RESULTS Among 716 prescreened patients, 204 (29%) were molecularly eligible and 135 started the first treatment part. Among these, 102 (76%) were discontinued because of death or disease progression on temozolomide priming, whereas 33 patients (24%) who achieved disease control started the second treatment part and represented the final study population. After a median follow-up of 23.1 months (interquartile range, 14.9-24.6 months), 8-month PFS rate was 36%. Median PFS and overall survival were 7.0 and 18.4 months, respectively, and overall response rate was 45%. Grade 3-4 immune-related adverse events were skin rash (6%), colitis (3%), and hypophysitis (3%). No unexpected adverse events or treatment-related deaths were reported. CONCLUSION The MAYA study provided proof-of-concept that a sequence of temozolomide priming followed by a combination of low-dose ipilimumab and nivolumab may induce durable clinical benefit in MSS and MGMT-silenced mCRC.
358 Background: In resectable GAC/GEJAC, MSI status is associated with better survival and potential lack of benefit from chemotherapy. Given the high responsiveness of MSI tumors to immunotherapy, neoadjuvant or definitive dual CTLA-4/PD(L)-1 inhibition may allow omission of chemotherapy or surgery. Methods: INFINITY is a multicentre, single-arm, multi-cohort phase II trial (NCT04817826) investigating the activity and safety of tremelimumab+durvalumab as neoadjuvant (Cohort 1) or definitive (Cohort 2) treatment for MSI, mismatch repair deficient (dMMR) and EBV-negative resectable GAC/GEJAC. In Cohort 1, patients (pts) received a 12-week treatment with single high dose tremelimumab 300 mg and durvalumab 1500 mg q4 weeks (T300/D) for 3 cycles followed by surgery. The primary endpoint was pCR rate (ypT0N0) with negative ctDNA after T300/D. Secondary endpoints: disease-free survival, overall survival, quality of life. Exploratory: correlation of pCR with clinical variables, PDL-1 CPS assessed by IHC 22C3, tumor mutational burden (TMB) by Foundation One, liquid biopsies and other biomarkers. Cohort 2 investigates non operative management after same treatment regimen. Results: Overall, 18 pts with MSI/dMMR resectable cT2-4 any N GAC/GEJAC were recruited in Cohort 1. One withdrew consent and 2 achieved a complete clinical-pathological response at radiology and endoscopy (ongoing) and refused surgery. Among 15 evaluable patients, 1 had disease progression and 14 underwent resection. pCR rate was 60% (9/15) and major-complete pathological response (<10% viable cells) was 80%. All pts with pCR had negative ctDNA status pre-surgery. pCR rate was 1/6 (17%) in T4 vs 8/9 (89%) in T2-3 tumors (p=0.011), whereas no correlation was found with baseline N status. PDL-1 CPS was not associated with outcomes and TMB had a non-significant trend of correlation with pCR (median TMB 26 in non-pCR vs 40 in pCR group, p=0.2). Grade≥3 immune-related AEs occurred in 3 pts of safety population (n=18): colitis, pneumonitis, liver toxicity, all resolved with high dose steroids and did not impair surgery. Two pts died after surgery for other reasons than disease or AEs, whereas no disease relapses were observed in remaining pts. QoL and additional translational analyses on RNA-seq, digital spatial profiling and ctDNA monitoring will be presented. Conclusions: Pre-operative T300/D for 3 months was safe and provided promising proof of efficacy in MSI, dMMR GAC/GEJAC pts. These results open the way to investigate NOM in pts with clinical, pathological and molecular (ctDNA minimal residual disease) complete response after T300/D. Enrollment in Cohort 2 has started after IDMC evaluation and protocol. amendment to include only pts with cT2-3 tumors confirmed at staging laparoscopy. Clinical trial information: NCT04817826 .
In resectable gastric or gastroesophageal junction cancer (GC/GEJC), the powerful positive prognostic effect and the potential predictive value for a lack of benefit from the combination of adjuvant/peri-operative chemotherapy for the MSI-high status was demonstrated. Given the high sensitivity of MSI-high tumors for immunotherapy, exploratory trials showed that combination immunotherapy induces a high rate of complete pathological response (pCR), potentially achieving cancer cure without surgery. INFINITY is an ongoing phase II, multicentre, single-arm, multi-cohort trial investigating the activity and safety of tremelimumab and durvalumab as neoadjuvant (Cohort 1) or potentially definitive (Cohort 2) treatment for MSI-high/dMMR/EBV-negative, resectable GC/GEJC. About 310 patients will be pre-screened, to enroll a total of 31 patients, 18 and 13 in Cohort 1 and 2, at 25 Italian Centres. The primary endpoint of Cohort 1 is rate of pCR (ypT0N0) and negative ctDNA after neoadjuvant immunotherapy, of Cohort 2 is 2-year complete response rate, defined as absence of macroscopic or microscopic residual disease (locally/regionally/distantly) at radiological examinations, tissue and liquid biopsy, during non-operative management without salvage gastrectomy. The ongoing INFINITY proof-of-concept study may provide evidence on immunotherapy and the potential omission of surgery in localized/locally advanced GC/GEJC patients selected for dMMR/MSI-high status eligible for radical resection.
Purpose: To determine whether second-line therapy with capecitabine and temozolomide was superior to irinotecan, leucovorin, and fluorouracil (FOLFIRI) in patients with RAS-mutated, methylguanine methyltransferase (MGMT)-methylated metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). Experimental design: In this randomized, phase II trial, we enrolled patients with RAS-mutated, MGMT-methylated mCRC after failure of oxaliplatin-based regimen. Patients with centrally confirmed MGMT methylation were stratified by first-line progression-free survival (PFS) and prior bevacizumab and randomized to either capecitabine plus temozolomide (arm A, CAPTEM) or FOLFIRI (arm B). The primary endpoint was PFS analyzed on intention-to-treat basis, with 90% power and one-sided significance level of 0.05 to detect an increase of median time from 2 months in arm B to 4 months in arm A. Results: Between November 2014 and May 2019, 86 patients were randomly assigned to arm A (n ¼ 43) or arm B (n ¼ 43). After a median follow-up of 30.5 months (interquartile range, 12.2-36.3), 79 disease progression or death events occurred. Superiority of arm A was not demonstrated (one-sided P ¼ 0.223). Progression-free survival and overall survival were 3.5 (2.0-5.0) and 9.5 (8.2-25.8) in arm A versus 3.5 (2.3-6.1) and 10.6 (8.5-20.8) in arm B [HR ¼ 1.19 (0.82-1.72) and HR ¼ 0.97 (0.58-1.61)], respectively. Grade !3 treatment-related adverse events had higher incidence in arm B versus A (47.6% vs 16.3%), and quality of life was significantly worse in arm B. Patients with positive MGMT expression by IHC did not benefit from CAPTEM. Conclusions: Temozolomide-based therapy warrants further investigation in molecularly hyperselected subgroups.
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