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Clinical activity of PD-1 inhibition in the treatment of locally advanced or metastatic basal cell carcinoma

Authors :
Gino Kim In
Aparna Nallagangula
Jacob Seung Choi
Lisa Tachiki
Matthew J Blackburn
Stephen Capone
Kathryn B Bollin
Daniel Y. Reuben
Keisuke Shirai
Sandy Zhang-Nunes
Omar Ragab
Alicia Terando
Jenny C. Hu
Han Lee
Shailender Bhatia
Sunandana Chandra
Jose Lutzky
Geoffrey Thomas Gibney
Source :
Journal for immunotherapy of cancer. 10(5)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BackgroundBasal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the most common malignancy worldwide, yet the management of patients with advanced or metastatic disease is challenging, with limited treatment options. Recently, programmed death receptor 1 (PD-1) inhibition has demonstrated activity in BCC after prior Hedgehog inhibitor treatment.MethodsWe conducted a multicenter, retrospective analysis of BCC patients treated with PD-1 inhibitor therapy. We examined the efficacy and safety of PD-1 therapy, as well as clinical and pathological variables in association with outcomes. Progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS) and duration of response (DOR) were calculated using Kaplan-Meier methodology. Toxicity was graded per Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events V.5.0.ResultsA total of 29 patients with BCC who were treated with PD-1 inhibition were included for analysis, including 20 (69.0%) with locally advanced and 9 (31.0%) with metastatic disease. The objective response rate was 31.0%, with five partial responses (17.2%), and four complete responses (13.8%). Nine patients had stable disease (31.0%), with a disease control rate of 62.1%. The median DOR was not reached. Median PFS was 12.2 months (95% CI 0.0 to 27.4). Median OS was 32.4 months (95% CI 18.1 to 46.7). Two patients (6.9%) developed grade 3 or higher toxicity, while four patients (13.8%) discontinued PD-1 inhibition because of toxicity. Higher platelets (p=0.022) and any grade toxicity (p=0.024) were significantly associated with disease control rate.ConclusionsThe clinical efficacy of PD-1 inhibition among patients with advanced or metastatic BCC in this real-world cohort were comparable to published trial data. Further investigation of PD-1 inhibition is needed to define its optimal role for patients with this disease.

Details

ISSN :
20511426
Volume :
10
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal for immunotherapy of cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....360c0e5a2fc827d45bd3704458f2edbf