Department of Radiation Oncology, Universitatsklinikum Erlangen, Friedrich-Alexander-Universitat Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany
Markus Hecht , Markus Eckstein , Sandra Rutzner , Jens von der Grün , Thomas Illmer , Gunther Klautke , Simon Laban , Matthias G. Hautmann , Thomas Brunner , Balint Tamaskovics , Axel Hinke , Benjamin Frey , Sabine Semrau , Arndt Hartmann , Panagiotis Balermpas , Wilfried Budach , Udo S Gaipl , Heinrich Iro , Antoniu-Oreste Gostian , Rainer Fietkau
Background: Inhibition of the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway is efficient in recurrent/metastatic HNSCC. Targeting the immune checkpoint CTLA-4 may be synergistic to radiotherapy. This trial studies feasibility and efficacy of combined PD-L1/CTLA-4 blockade concomitant to induction chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Methods: Patients with previously untreated stage III-IVB (AJCC 8th edition) HNSCC were eligible for this multicenter phase II trial. Treatment consisted of a single cycle of cisplatin 30mg/m² d1-3, docetaxel 75mg/m² d1, durvalumab 1500mg fix dose d5 and tremelimumab 75mg fix dose d5. Patients with at least 20% increase of intratumoral CD8+ immune cell density or pathological complete response (pCR) in the re-biopsy (performed on d22-26) entered radio-immunotherapy (RIT) up to a total dose of 70Gy. Patients received further three cycles of durvalumab/tremelimumab (q4w, two concomitant and one subsequent) followed by eight cycles of durvalumab mono (q4w). Primary endpoint was a feasibility rate of patients entering RIT to receive treatment until at least cycle 6 of immunotherapy of ≥80% (i.e. dose limiting toxicity/DLT ≤20%; exclusion of patients with other reasons than DLT for treatment discontinuation; feasibility unacceptable if ≤65%). The calculated sample size was 57 patients to enter RIT. Main secondary endpoints were progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). Results: Between Sep 2018 and Mai 2020, 80 patients were enrolled (one excluded). Median age was 60 years, 33 patients (42%) were current smokers, 43 patients (54%) had oropharyngeal tumors (53% p16 positive), 44 patients (56%) were stage IV. Median follow up was 12.5 months. After induction chemo-immunotherapy 41 patients had pCR and 31 an intratumoral CD8+ immune cell increase. Of 60 patients entering RIT (primary endpoint cohort), 10 received DLT and 4 discontinued for other reasons. The feasibility rate of the RIT cohort until cycle 6 was 82%, meeting the primary endpoint of ≥80% (95% confidence interval (CI), one-sided (lower boundary): 72%). The RIT cohort had a PFS rate at 1 year of 79% (CI 69-90%) and at 2 years of 73% (CI 61-87%) and an OS rate at 1 year of 89% (CI 81-98%) and at 2 years of 86% (CI 77-97%). The entire study cohort had a PFS rate at 1 year of 75% (CI 65-85%) and at 2 years of 68% (CI 58-81%) and an OS rate at 1 year of 86% (CI 78-95%) and at 2 years of 80% (CI 70-91%). Toxicity (treatment-related or un-related) ≥grade 3 appeared in 75 patients (95%) and mainly consisted of dysphagia (53%), leucopenia (48%) and infections (29%). DLT mainly consisted of hepatitis (10%). Conclusions: The trial met the primary endpoint feasibility. CD8+ T cell-based pathological patient selection after induction therapy identifies patients with promising PFS rates after chemotherapy-free RIT. Clinical trial information: nct03426657
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Abstract Disclosures
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