https://vimeo.com/440629763
The addition of tremelimumab to frontline durvalumab and platinum-based chemotherapy did not demonstrate a statistically significant improvement in overall survival (OS) in patients with extensive-stage small cell lung cancer (ES-SCLC), missing the co-primary endpoint of the phase 3 CASPIAN study.
Presented by Prof. Luis Paz-Ares (Hospital 12 de Octubre, Madrid, Spain), this was the first report of the third study arm of CASPIAN, in which the investigational CTLA-4 inhibitor tremelimumab was added to PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitor durvalumab on top of standard of care chemotherapy [1].
CASPIAN randomised 805 patients to 3 treatment arms: durvalumab + tremelimumab + etoposide cisplatin/carboplatin (EP; n=268), EP alone (n=269), or durvalumab + EP (n=268). The primary endpoint of the study was OS; secondary endpoints included progression-free survival (PFS), objective response rate (ORR), and safety and tolerability. Findings from CASPIAN reported previously for the last of the 2 treatment arms showed that, after a median follow-up of 14.2 months, the addition of the durvalumab improved the median OS to 13.0 months versus 10.3 months with EP alone (HR 0.73; 95% CI 0.59-0.91; P=0.0047) [2]. Consequently, in March 2020, the FDA approved durvalumab in combination with EP as first-line therapy for ES-SCLC.
In the current presentation, after a median follow-up of 25.1 months, the median OS was 12.9 months among patients who received durvalumab + EP compared with 10.5 months for those who received EP alone (HR 0.75; 95% CI 0.62-0.91; P=0.0032), fully supporting the initial report. Of note, the study design allowed the use of either backbone carboplatin or cisplatin; the OS data favoured durvalumab no matter whether carboplatin (HR 0.79; 95% CI 0.63-0.98) or cisplatin (HR 0.67; 95% CI 0.46-0.97) was used.
“Importantly, the separation among the curves seems to be observed over time and, indeed, survival at 2 years improves from 14% [of participants] in the control arm to 22% in the experimental arm. The magnitude of the benefit is very similar and very consistent across all the prespecified subgroups of patients analysed, including those treated with cisplatin or those patients with liver or brain metastases,” said Prof. Paz-Ares.
However, the study’s third arm testing dual checkpoint blockade with tremelimumab + durvalumab + EP did not meet the prespecified threshold for statistical significance (P≤0.0418). The median OS for this combination was 10.4 months versus 10.5 months for EP alone (HR 0.82; 95% CI 0.68-1.00; P=0.0451). The OS survival rates at 18 months were 32.0% in the durvalumab + EP arm, 30.7% in the tremelimumab + durvalumab + EP group, and 24.8% in the EP cohort; at 24 months, those rates were 22.2%, 23.4%, and 14.4%, respectively. The median PFS was 4.9 months for the tremelimumab + durvalumab + EP arm compared with 5.4 months for the EP arm (HR 0.84; 95% CI 0.70-1.01). The confirmed ORR and median duration of response were 58.4% and 5.2 months, respectively, in the tremelimumab + durvalumab + EP group compared with 58.0% and 5.1 months for the EP arm.
Safety events were consistent with the known adverse events (AEs) associated with the medicines. The rates of grade 3/4 and serious AEs were, respectively, 70.3% and 45.5% in the tremelimumab + durvalumab + EP arm, 62.3% and 32.1% in the durvalumab + EP arm, and 62.8% and 36.5% in the EP group. AEs leading to treatment discontinuation occurred in 21.4% of patients in the tremelimumab + durvalumab + EP arm, 10.2% in the durvalumab + EP group, and 9.4% in the EP cohort. Treatment-related deaths were 12 in the tremelimumab + durvalumab + EP arm, 6 in the durvalumab + EP arm, and 2 in the EP arm. In conclusion, the benefit-to-risk ratio favoured treatment with durvalumab + EP, without tremelimumab, for treatment-naïve ES-SCLC.
- Paz-Ares LG, et al. ASCO Virtual Meeting, 29-31 May 2020, Abstract 9002.
- Paz-Ares LG, et al. 2019;394(10212):1929-1939.
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Table of Contents: ASCO 2020
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Advanced breast cancer: locoregional therapy does not improve OS
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Maintenance olaparib improves OS in relapsed ovarian cancer with BRCA1/2 mutation
Combination pembrolizumab/chemo improves PFS in metastatic TNBC
Effect of veliparib with or without cisplatin in breast cancer: results of SWOG S1416
PHOEBE, a phase 3 trial comparing pyrotinib and lapatinib in HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer
BYLieve demonstrates efficacy of PIK3CA-directed treatment post CDK4/6-ihibition
Strategies emerge for chemotherapy de-escalation in HER2-positive breast cancer
Multiple Myeloma
Carfilzomib: no PFS benefit for multiple myeloma
Lung Cancer
ES-SCLC: tremelimumab + durvalumab + chemotherapy misses endpoint
Adjuvant osimertinib in NSCLC: practice changing ADAURA trial
ES-SCLC: pembrolizumab KEYNOTE-604 data
Second-line gemcitabine plus ramucirumab significantly improves overall survival
Tiragolumab and atezolizumab: ORR in NSCLC
MET-amplified advanced NSCLC responds well to MET inhibitor capmatinib
Genitourinary Cancer
Urothelial cancer: avelumab works as maintenance therapy
ARAMIS final OS and nmCRPC safety outcomes
Final survival results from phase 3 SPARTAN trial
Novel drug for kidney cancers/VHL patients
Primary analysis from IMvigor010, adjuvant atezolizumab in high risk muscle-invasive urothelial carcinoma
First randomised trial of Lu-PSMA in mCRPC progressing after docetaxel
Gastrointestinal Cancer
HER2-expressing metastatic colorectal cancer: trastuzumab deruxtecan
REGOMUNE: a phase 2 study combining regorafenib and avelumab
Cardiotoxicity: consider switching to S-1
Perioperative chemotherapy for resectable pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma
Real-world data of sequential sorafenib followed by regorafenib in unresectable HCC
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Sustained improvements in quality of life with larotrectinib
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