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Italian Nivolumab Expanded Access Program in Nonsquamous Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Patients: Results in Never-Smokers and EGFR-Mutant Patients
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- Introduction Nivolumab is the first checkpoint inhibitor approved for the treatment of nonsquamous NSCLC. We report results from the nivolumab Italian expanded access program focusing on never-smokers and patients with EGFR-mutant nonsqamous NSCLC. Methods Nivolumab (3 mg/kg intravenously every 2 weeks) was administered upon physicians' request to patients who had relapsed after one or more prior systemic treatments for stage IIIB/IV nonsquamous NSCLC. Efficacy and safety were evaluated in patients who received at least one dose of nivolumab. Results Of 1588 patients with nonsquamous NSCLC, 305 (19.2%) were never-smokers. EGFR status was available for 1395 patients. Of the 102 patients (6.4%) with EGFR mutation–positive tumors, 51 (50%) were never-smokers. The objective response rate was significantly higher in patients with wild-type EGFR than patients with EGFR-mutant tumors (19.6% versus 8.8% [p = 0.007]), in former and current smokers than in never-smokers (21.5% versus 9.2% [p = 0.0001]), and in never-smokers with wild-type EGFR than in never-smokers with mutant EGFR (11.0% versus 1.9% [p = 0.04]). There was no significant difference in objective response rate between smokers with wild-type EGFR and smokers with mutant EGFR (22.0% versus 20.6%). There was no statistically significant difference in median progression-free survival or in median overall survival. The median overall survival times were 11 months in patients with EGFR wild-type tumors versus 8.3 months in patients with EGFR-mutant tumors, 11.6 months in smokers versus 10.0 months in never-smokers, 11.0 months in never-smokers with EGFR wild-type tumors versus 5.6 months in never-smokers with EGFR-mutant tumors, and 14.1 months in smokers with EGFR-mutant tumors versus 11.3 months in smokers with EGFR wild-type tumors. Conclusions The data on the Italian expanded access program in populations with nonsquamous NSCLC suggest that subgroups of patients could benefit differently from nivolumab according to their EGFR mutational status and smoking habits. These results warrant further investigation.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
0301 basic medicine
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
Oncology
medicine.medical_specialty
EGFR positive
Lung Neoplasms
Expanded access program
Never-smokers
Nonsquamous non–small cell lung cancer
nivolumab
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung
ErbB Receptors
Female
Humans
Italy
Middle Aged
Nivolumab
Non-Smokers
Mutation
Gene mutation
Efficacy
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Internal medicine
80 and over
Medicine
Non-Small-Cell Lung
Lung cancer
Survival rate
Cancer staging
business.industry
Carcinoma
medicine.disease
Rash
respiratory tract diseases
030104 developmental biology
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
Expanded access
medicine.symptom
business
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....54cec985ae23d54b6bf0557196c5765e