Cancer Hospital of Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China
Luhua Wang , Ming Chen , Ken Kato , Lucjan Wyrwicz , Elizabeth Catherine Smyth , Anastasia Jiang , Di Zhang , Scott H. Robbins , Philip He , Alejandra Negro , Nabil F. Saba
Background: Esophageal cancer is the eighth most common cancer type and the sixth leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide, and esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) is the most common type of esophageal cancer. For patients with locally advanced, unresectable ESCC (AJCC 8th Stage II–IVA), definitive chemoradiotherapy (dCRT) is the current standard of care; however, up to half of patients will experience disease progression within two years of dCRT, and overall survival rates remain suboptimal. The combination of immune checkpoint inhibitors with CRT has demonstrated synergistic antitumor activity in pre-clinical models, and recent clinical data has demonstrated clinical benefit of combined programmed cell death-1 inhibition and preoperative CRT in patients with locally advanced ESCC. KUNLUN (NCT04550260) is a Phase 3, multicenter, global study evaluating the efficacy and safety of durvalumab, a programmed cell death ligand-1 (PD-L1) inhibitor, given concurrently with, and after, dCRT in patients with locally advanced, unresectable ESCC. Methods: Approximately 600 patients will be randomized 2:1 to receive either durvalumab with dCRT (cisplatin plus fluorouracil or cisplatin plus capecitabine, with a total dose of 50–64 Gy radiation), followed by durvalumab for up to approximately 24 months, or placebo with dCRT, followed by placebo for up to approximately 24 months. Eligible patients will have histologically or cytologically confirmed ESCC, and present with locally advanced, unresectable ESCC that is deemed suitable for dCRT. Patients must have an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0 or 1, and have not received prior anti-cancer treatment. The co-primary endpoint of the study is progression-free survival according to RECIST v1.1 as assessed by blinded independent central review in all randomized patients and in patients with PD-L1-high tumors. Additional endpoints include overall survival and safety. Study enrollment is ongoing. Funding: This study was sponsored by AstraZeneca. References: Hong MH, et al. J Clin Oncol 2019;37(15 suppl). Abs 4027. Clinical trial information: NCT04550260.
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Abstract Disclosures
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