Putative Biomarkers of Clinical Benefit With Pembrolizumab in Advanced Urothelial Cancer: Results from the KEYNOTE-045 and KEYNOTE-052 Landmark Trials
- Abstract
- Purpose: In an exploratory analysis, we investigated the association between programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1), tumor mutational burden (TMB), T-cell-inflamed gene expression profile (TcellinfGEP), and stromal signature with outcomes of pembrolizumab in urothelial carcinoma (UC).
Patients and methods: Patients with advanced UC received first-line pembrolizumab 200 mg every 3 weeks in the single-arm phase II KEYNOTE-052 trial (NCT02335424) and salvage pembrolizumab 200 mg every 3 weeks or chemotherapy (paclitaxel/docetaxel/vinflunine) in the randomized phase III KEYNOTE-045 trial (NCT02256436). The association of each biomarker (continuous variable) with objective response rate (ORR), progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS) was evaluated using logistic regression (ORR) and Cox PH (PFS, OS), adjusted for ECOG PS; nominal P values were calculated without multiplicity adjustment (one-sided, pembrolizumab; two-sided, chemotherapy). Significance was prespecified at α = 0.05.
Results: In KEYNOTE-052, PD-L1, TMB, and TcellinfGEP were significantly associated with improved outcomes; stromal signature was significantly associated with worse outcomes. In KEYNOTE-045, although findings for TMB and TcellinfGEP with pembrolizumab were consistent with those of KEYNOTE-052, PD-L1 was not significantly associated with improved outcomes, nor was stromal signature associated with worse outcomes with pembrolizumab; chemotherapy was not associated with outcomes in a consistent manner for any of the biomarkers. Hazard ratio (HR) estimates at prespecified cutoffs showed an advantage for pembrolizumab versus chemotherapy regardless of PD-L1 or TMB, with a trend toward lower HRs in the combined positive score ≥10 and the TMB ≥175 mutation/exome subgroup. For TcellinfGEP, PFS and OS HRs were lower in the TcellinfGEP-nonlow subgroup regardless of treatment.
Conclusions: Multiple biomarkers characterizing the tumor microenvironment may help predict response to pembrolizumab monotherapy in UC, and potential clinical utility of these biomarkers may be context-dependent.
- Author(s)
- Joaquim Bellmunt; Ronald de Wit; Yves Fradet; Miguel A Climent; Daniel P Petrylak; Jae-Lyun Lee; Lawrence Fong; Andrea Necchi; Cora N Sternberg; Peter H O'Donnell; Thomas Powles; Elizabeth R Plimack; Dean F Bajorin; Arjun V Balar; Daniel Castellano; Toni K Choueiri; Stephane Culine; Winald Gerritsen; Howard Gurney; David I Quinn; Jacqueline Vuky; Nicholas J Vogelzang; Razvan Cristescu; Jared Lunceford; Assieh Saadatpour; Andrey Loboda; Junshui Ma; Mohini Rajasagi; James Luke Godwin; Blanca Homet Moreno; Petros Grivas
- Issued Date
- 2022
- Type
- Article
- DOI
- 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-21-3089
- URI
- https://oak.ulsan.ac.kr/handle/2021.oak/14278
- Publisher
- CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
- Language
- 영어
- ISSN
- 1078-0432
- Citation Volume
- 28
- Citation Number
- 10
- Citation Start Page
- 2050
- Citation End Page
- 2060
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- Medicine > Nursing
- 공개 및 라이선스
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