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Tremelimumab and durvalumab combination for the non-operative management (Nom) of microsatellite instability (msi)-high resectable gastric or gastroesophageal junction cancer: The multicentre, single-arm, multi-cohort, phase ii infinity study

Authors :
Giovanni Gerardo Cardellino
Federica Palermo
Roberto Murialdo
Chiara Cremolini
Lorenzo Antonuzzo
Massimo Di Maio
Francesca Pucci
Giovanni Luca Frassineti
Sara Lonardi
Emiliano Tamburini
Giuseppe Aprile
Massimo Aglietta
Lorenzo Fornaro
Margherita Ratti
Stefano Tamberi
Francesco Iachetta
Carlo Sposito
Antonia Strippoli
Alessandra Raimondi
Valeria Smiroldo
Cristina Granetto
Rossana Berardi
Ferdinando De Vita
Michele Prisciandaro
Filippo Pietrantonio
Alberto Zaniboni
Vincenzo Mazzaferro
Elena Ongaro
Nicola Silvestris
Andrea Spallanzani
Maria Di Bartolomeo
Giovanni de Manzoni
Raimondi, Alessandra
Palermo, Federica
Prisciandaro, Michele
Aglietta, Massimo
Antonuzzo, Lorenzo
Aprile, Giuseppe
Berardi, Rossana
Cardellino, Giovanni G
De Manzoni, Giovanni
De Vita, Ferdinando
Di Maio, Massimo
Fornaro, Lorenzo
Frassineti, Giovanni L
Granetto, Cristina
Iachetta, Francesco
Lonardi, Sara
Murialdo, Roberto
Ongaro, Elena
Pucci, Francesca
Ratti, Margherita
Silvestris, Nicola
Smiroldo, Valeria
Spallanzani, Andrea
Strippoli, Antonia
Tamberi, Stefano
Tamburini, Emiliano
Zaniboni, Alberto
Di Bartolomeo, Maria
Cremolini, Chiara
Sposito, Carlo
Mazzaferro, Vincenzo
Pietrantonio, Filippo
Source :
Cancers, Cancers, Vol 13, Iss 2839, p 2839 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Simple Summary The status of microsatellite instability (MSI-H) in gastric or gastroesophageal junction cancer (GC/GEJC) patients eligible for radical surgery proved to be prognostic for an improved survival outcome and predictive for poor/no benefit from the combination of adjuvant/peri-operative chemotherapy. MSI-H tumors display a high sensitivity to immunotherapy and exploratory studies showed that a pre-operative treatment with immune-checkpoint inhibitors may achieve elevated rates of pathological complete responses. The ongoing proof-of-concept INFINITY study is aimed at investigating the role of the combo-immunotherapy durvalumab plus tremelimumab as a neoadjuvant or potentially definitive treatment (avoiding surgery in case of complete clinical response) for MSI-H resectable GC/GEJC patients. Abstract 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.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancers, Cancers, Vol 13, Iss 2839, p 2839 (2021)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a7d42eb7021ab2e3d221d6c6e6d9cce7