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Patients with gastric cancer or gastroesophageal junction cancer (GEJ) could experience significantly improved progression-free survival (PFS), and maybe overall survival (OS), with nivolumab (Opdivo) in the first-line and neoadjuvant settings, suggest data from three phase 3 trials.

However, contrasting results between the trials and question marks over the effect of the drug in all-comers leave some questions yet to be answered, despite the “practice-changing” findings, said experts discussing the new data.

The research was presented Sept. 21 at the European Society for Medical Oncology Virtual Congress 2020.

Gastric cancer and GEJ have been an area of interest for immunotherapy in recent years, as standard first-line chemotherapy is associated with poor OS at a median of less than 1 year.

Previous smaller studies have suggested that nivolumab has promising activity in the first-line setting, improving survival particularly in individuals with a combined positive score (CPS) for programmed death–ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression ≥5.

The new results come from the largest phase 3 trial of its kind to date, CheckMate 649, which involved 1,581 previously untreated patients with unresectable HER2-negative gastric cancer, GEJ, or esophageal adenocarcinoma.

Among these patients, 60% had a PD-L1 CPS ≥5.

Patients were randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups: Nivolumab plus ipilimumab (Yervoy), nivolumab plus oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy, or chemotherapy alone.

Results, after a minimum follow-up of 12 months, show that nivolumab plus chemotherapy was associated with significantly better OS than chemotherapy alone, reported Markus Moehler, MD, PhD, Johannes-Gutenberg University Clinic, Mainz, Germany.

In patients with PD-L1 CPS ≥5, median OS was 14.4 months with nivolumab-chemotherapy versus 11.1 months for chemotherapy alone (hazard ratio 0.71, < .0001).

The figures were similar for patients with a PD-L1 CPS ≥1, at 14.0 months and 11.3 months (HR, 0.77; P = .0001), and also across the whole study population (13.8 months vs. 11.6 months; HR, 0.80, = .0002).

PFS, however, was significantly improved with the nivolumab-chemotherapy combination only in patients with a PD-L1 CPS ≥5, at a median of 7.7 months vs 6.0 months (HR, 0.68, P < .0001).

The proportion of patients with treatment-related adverse events leading to discontinuation were 36% with nivolumab plus chemotherapy and 24% for chemotherapy alone.

At a press conference, Dr. Moehler said the benefits seen with nivolumab plus chemotherapy are “highly clinically meaningful,” and the combination “represents a new potential standard first-line treatment” for these patients.

These results are “practice changing” and are “clearly significant,” commented Salah-Eddin Al-Batran, MD, Krankenhaus Nordwest-University Cancer Center, Frankfurt, Germany, who was not involved with the study.

“However, as a physician,” he continued, “I am treating an individual patient and, for me, it’s important to know the efficacy in the patients with a CPS of 1-4, or of 0.”

“We have to be sure that we do not inflate the results for the all-comers by the very responsive group of high-expressers,” he said, adding that other factors to consider will be microsatellite instability and tumor mutational burden. “I think these questions have to be addressed to give us a clear picture of how to treat the patient sitting in front of us.”

Surprisingly, the results from ATTRACTION-4, a very similar phase 3 trial conducted in Japan, Korea, and Taiwan, did not follow the same pattern.

This trial involved 724 previously untreated patients with HER2-negative gastric cancer or GEJ randomly assigned to receive nivolumab plus chemotherapy or chemotherapy alone.

Lead author Narikazu Boku, MD, PhD, National Cancer Center Hospital, Tokyo, Japan, said that, after a median follow-up of 11.6 months, the combination treatment was associated with a significant improvement in PFS, at a median 10.5 months versus 8.3 months with chemotherapy alone (HR, 0.68, P = .0007).

In contrast, there was no significant difference in OS between the nivolumab and placebo arms, at a median of 17.5 months and 17.2 months, respectively (HR, 0.90; P = .257).

Invited discussant Elizabeth Smyth, MD, from Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge, England, suggested the lack of OS benefit seen in ATTRACTION-4 could be the result of a number of factors, including that PD-L1 status was assessed on tumor cells only and there were no key endpoints based around PD-L1 status.

Moreover, the posttrial therapy could have affected the overall results, as Asian patients typically receive more subsequent therapies than those elsewhere.

Dr. Smyth also commented that both CheckMate 649 and ATTRACTION-4 represent a “paradigm shift” in the first-line treatment of gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma.
 

 

 

Nivolumab in adjuvant setting

The results of a third trial presented at the ESMO meeting suggest a role for nivolumab in the adjuvant setting, following neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy in patients with resected esophageal or GEJ cancer.

This was the CheckMate 577 trial, which compared adjuvant nivolumab with placebo in 794 patients from across the globe.

Nivolumab significantly increased median disease-free survival to 22.4 months versus 11.0 months with placebo (HR, 0.69, P = .0003).

Treatment-related adverse events leading to discontinuation were reported in 9% of nivolumab patients versus 3% on placebo, reported Ronan J. Kelly, MD, chief of oncology at Baylor Scott & White Health in Dallas.

Interestingly, patient-reported health status on the EQ-5D-3L visual analogue scale (VAS) and utility index were similar between nivolumab- and placebo-treated patients, with both groups experiencing clinically meaningful improvements.

Dr. Kelly said this is “the first adjuvant therapy to provide a statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvement” in patients with esophageal cancer or GEJ cancer following neoadjuvant chemoradiation.

Consequently, the results “represent the first advance in years for this group of patients, potentially establishing adjuvant nivolumab as a new standard of care.”

However, the invited discussant raised several issues with the trial design. Preoperative chemoradiation is not “universally accepted” as the standard of care in this setting, disease-free survival is not currently validated as a major endpoint in gastroesophageal cancers, and the median follow-up was short, commented Andrés Cervantes, MD, PhD, University of Valencia (Spain), and president-elect of ESMO.

In addition, there was no differentiation between esophageal squamous cell and adenocarcinoma histologies.

Nevertheless, CheckMate 577 is the first positive adjuvant study for checkpoint inhibitors in gastrointestinal tumors and, crucially, the results “are independent of PD-L1 status,” Dr. Cervantes said.

CheckMate 649 was funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb. ATTRACTION-4 was funded by Ono Pharmaceutical and Bristol-Myers Squibb. CheckMate 577 was funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb. Many of the presenters reported relationships with pharmaceutical companies.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Patients with gastric cancer or gastroesophageal junction cancer (GEJ) could experience significantly improved progression-free survival (PFS), and maybe overall survival (OS), with nivolumab (Opdivo) in the first-line and neoadjuvant settings, suggest data from three phase 3 trials.

However, contrasting results between the trials and question marks over the effect of the drug in all-comers leave some questions yet to be answered, despite the “practice-changing” findings, said experts discussing the new data.

The research was presented Sept. 21 at the European Society for Medical Oncology Virtual Congress 2020.

Gastric cancer and GEJ have been an area of interest for immunotherapy in recent years, as standard first-line chemotherapy is associated with poor OS at a median of less than 1 year.

Previous smaller studies have suggested that nivolumab has promising activity in the first-line setting, improving survival particularly in individuals with a combined positive score (CPS) for programmed death–ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression ≥5.

The new results come from the largest phase 3 trial of its kind to date, CheckMate 649, which involved 1,581 previously untreated patients with unresectable HER2-negative gastric cancer, GEJ, or esophageal adenocarcinoma.

Among these patients, 60% had a PD-L1 CPS ≥5.

Patients were randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups: Nivolumab plus ipilimumab (Yervoy), nivolumab plus oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy, or chemotherapy alone.

Results, after a minimum follow-up of 12 months, show that nivolumab plus chemotherapy was associated with significantly better OS than chemotherapy alone, reported Markus Moehler, MD, PhD, Johannes-Gutenberg University Clinic, Mainz, Germany.

In patients with PD-L1 CPS ≥5, median OS was 14.4 months with nivolumab-chemotherapy versus 11.1 months for chemotherapy alone (hazard ratio 0.71, < .0001).

The figures were similar for patients with a PD-L1 CPS ≥1, at 14.0 months and 11.3 months (HR, 0.77; P = .0001), and also across the whole study population (13.8 months vs. 11.6 months; HR, 0.80, = .0002).

PFS, however, was significantly improved with the nivolumab-chemotherapy combination only in patients with a PD-L1 CPS ≥5, at a median of 7.7 months vs 6.0 months (HR, 0.68, P < .0001).

The proportion of patients with treatment-related adverse events leading to discontinuation were 36% with nivolumab plus chemotherapy and 24% for chemotherapy alone.

At a press conference, Dr. Moehler said the benefits seen with nivolumab plus chemotherapy are “highly clinically meaningful,” and the combination “represents a new potential standard first-line treatment” for these patients.

These results are “practice changing” and are “clearly significant,” commented Salah-Eddin Al-Batran, MD, Krankenhaus Nordwest-University Cancer Center, Frankfurt, Germany, who was not involved with the study.

“However, as a physician,” he continued, “I am treating an individual patient and, for me, it’s important to know the efficacy in the patients with a CPS of 1-4, or of 0.”

“We have to be sure that we do not inflate the results for the all-comers by the very responsive group of high-expressers,” he said, adding that other factors to consider will be microsatellite instability and tumor mutational burden. “I think these questions have to be addressed to give us a clear picture of how to treat the patient sitting in front of us.”

Surprisingly, the results from ATTRACTION-4, a very similar phase 3 trial conducted in Japan, Korea, and Taiwan, did not follow the same pattern.

This trial involved 724 previously untreated patients with HER2-negative gastric cancer or GEJ randomly assigned to receive nivolumab plus chemotherapy or chemotherapy alone.

Lead author Narikazu Boku, MD, PhD, National Cancer Center Hospital, Tokyo, Japan, said that, after a median follow-up of 11.6 months, the combination treatment was associated with a significant improvement in PFS, at a median 10.5 months versus 8.3 months with chemotherapy alone (HR, 0.68, P = .0007).

In contrast, there was no significant difference in OS between the nivolumab and placebo arms, at a median of 17.5 months and 17.2 months, respectively (HR, 0.90; P = .257).

Invited discussant Elizabeth Smyth, MD, from Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge, England, suggested the lack of OS benefit seen in ATTRACTION-4 could be the result of a number of factors, including that PD-L1 status was assessed on tumor cells only and there were no key endpoints based around PD-L1 status.

Moreover, the posttrial therapy could have affected the overall results, as Asian patients typically receive more subsequent therapies than those elsewhere.

Dr. Smyth also commented that both CheckMate 649 and ATTRACTION-4 represent a “paradigm shift” in the first-line treatment of gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma.
 

 

 

Nivolumab in adjuvant setting

The results of a third trial presented at the ESMO meeting suggest a role for nivolumab in the adjuvant setting, following neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy in patients with resected esophageal or GEJ cancer.

This was the CheckMate 577 trial, which compared adjuvant nivolumab with placebo in 794 patients from across the globe.

Nivolumab significantly increased median disease-free survival to 22.4 months versus 11.0 months with placebo (HR, 0.69, P = .0003).

Treatment-related adverse events leading to discontinuation were reported in 9% of nivolumab patients versus 3% on placebo, reported Ronan J. Kelly, MD, chief of oncology at Baylor Scott & White Health in Dallas.

Interestingly, patient-reported health status on the EQ-5D-3L visual analogue scale (VAS) and utility index were similar between nivolumab- and placebo-treated patients, with both groups experiencing clinically meaningful improvements.

Dr. Kelly said this is “the first adjuvant therapy to provide a statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvement” in patients with esophageal cancer or GEJ cancer following neoadjuvant chemoradiation.

Consequently, the results “represent the first advance in years for this group of patients, potentially establishing adjuvant nivolumab as a new standard of care.”

However, the invited discussant raised several issues with the trial design. Preoperative chemoradiation is not “universally accepted” as the standard of care in this setting, disease-free survival is not currently validated as a major endpoint in gastroesophageal cancers, and the median follow-up was short, commented Andrés Cervantes, MD, PhD, University of Valencia (Spain), and president-elect of ESMO.

In addition, there was no differentiation between esophageal squamous cell and adenocarcinoma histologies.

Nevertheless, CheckMate 577 is the first positive adjuvant study for checkpoint inhibitors in gastrointestinal tumors and, crucially, the results “are independent of PD-L1 status,” Dr. Cervantes said.

CheckMate 649 was funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb. ATTRACTION-4 was funded by Ono Pharmaceutical and Bristol-Myers Squibb. CheckMate 577 was funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb. Many of the presenters reported relationships with pharmaceutical companies.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

Patients with gastric cancer or gastroesophageal junction cancer (GEJ) could experience significantly improved progression-free survival (PFS), and maybe overall survival (OS), with nivolumab (Opdivo) in the first-line and neoadjuvant settings, suggest data from three phase 3 trials.

However, contrasting results between the trials and question marks over the effect of the drug in all-comers leave some questions yet to be answered, despite the “practice-changing” findings, said experts discussing the new data.

The research was presented Sept. 21 at the European Society for Medical Oncology Virtual Congress 2020.

Gastric cancer and GEJ have been an area of interest for immunotherapy in recent years, as standard first-line chemotherapy is associated with poor OS at a median of less than 1 year.

Previous smaller studies have suggested that nivolumab has promising activity in the first-line setting, improving survival particularly in individuals with a combined positive score (CPS) for programmed death–ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression ≥5.

The new results come from the largest phase 3 trial of its kind to date, CheckMate 649, which involved 1,581 previously untreated patients with unresectable HER2-negative gastric cancer, GEJ, or esophageal adenocarcinoma.

Among these patients, 60% had a PD-L1 CPS ≥5.

Patients were randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups: Nivolumab plus ipilimumab (Yervoy), nivolumab plus oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy, or chemotherapy alone.

Results, after a minimum follow-up of 12 months, show that nivolumab plus chemotherapy was associated with significantly better OS than chemotherapy alone, reported Markus Moehler, MD, PhD, Johannes-Gutenberg University Clinic, Mainz, Germany.

In patients with PD-L1 CPS ≥5, median OS was 14.4 months with nivolumab-chemotherapy versus 11.1 months for chemotherapy alone (hazard ratio 0.71, < .0001).

The figures were similar for patients with a PD-L1 CPS ≥1, at 14.0 months and 11.3 months (HR, 0.77; P = .0001), and also across the whole study population (13.8 months vs. 11.6 months; HR, 0.80, = .0002).

PFS, however, was significantly improved with the nivolumab-chemotherapy combination only in patients with a PD-L1 CPS ≥5, at a median of 7.7 months vs 6.0 months (HR, 0.68, P < .0001).

The proportion of patients with treatment-related adverse events leading to discontinuation were 36% with nivolumab plus chemotherapy and 24% for chemotherapy alone.

At a press conference, Dr. Moehler said the benefits seen with nivolumab plus chemotherapy are “highly clinically meaningful,” and the combination “represents a new potential standard first-line treatment” for these patients.

These results are “practice changing” and are “clearly significant,” commented Salah-Eddin Al-Batran, MD, Krankenhaus Nordwest-University Cancer Center, Frankfurt, Germany, who was not involved with the study.

“However, as a physician,” he continued, “I am treating an individual patient and, for me, it’s important to know the efficacy in the patients with a CPS of 1-4, or of 0.”

“We have to be sure that we do not inflate the results for the all-comers by the very responsive group of high-expressers,” he said, adding that other factors to consider will be microsatellite instability and tumor mutational burden. “I think these questions have to be addressed to give us a clear picture of how to treat the patient sitting in front of us.”

Surprisingly, the results from ATTRACTION-4, a very similar phase 3 trial conducted in Japan, Korea, and Taiwan, did not follow the same pattern.

This trial involved 724 previously untreated patients with HER2-negative gastric cancer or GEJ randomly assigned to receive nivolumab plus chemotherapy or chemotherapy alone.

Lead author Narikazu Boku, MD, PhD, National Cancer Center Hospital, Tokyo, Japan, said that, after a median follow-up of 11.6 months, the combination treatment was associated with a significant improvement in PFS, at a median 10.5 months versus 8.3 months with chemotherapy alone (HR, 0.68, P = .0007).

In contrast, there was no significant difference in OS between the nivolumab and placebo arms, at a median of 17.5 months and 17.2 months, respectively (HR, 0.90; P = .257).

Invited discussant Elizabeth Smyth, MD, from Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge, England, suggested the lack of OS benefit seen in ATTRACTION-4 could be the result of a number of factors, including that PD-L1 status was assessed on tumor cells only and there were no key endpoints based around PD-L1 status.

Moreover, the posttrial therapy could have affected the overall results, as Asian patients typically receive more subsequent therapies than those elsewhere.

Dr. Smyth also commented that both CheckMate 649 and ATTRACTION-4 represent a “paradigm shift” in the first-line treatment of gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma.
 

 

 

Nivolumab in adjuvant setting

The results of a third trial presented at the ESMO meeting suggest a role for nivolumab in the adjuvant setting, following neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy in patients with resected esophageal or GEJ cancer.

This was the CheckMate 577 trial, which compared adjuvant nivolumab with placebo in 794 patients from across the globe.

Nivolumab significantly increased median disease-free survival to 22.4 months versus 11.0 months with placebo (HR, 0.69, P = .0003).

Treatment-related adverse events leading to discontinuation were reported in 9% of nivolumab patients versus 3% on placebo, reported Ronan J. Kelly, MD, chief of oncology at Baylor Scott & White Health in Dallas.

Interestingly, patient-reported health status on the EQ-5D-3L visual analogue scale (VAS) and utility index were similar between nivolumab- and placebo-treated patients, with both groups experiencing clinically meaningful improvements.

Dr. Kelly said this is “the first adjuvant therapy to provide a statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvement” in patients with esophageal cancer or GEJ cancer following neoadjuvant chemoradiation.

Consequently, the results “represent the first advance in years for this group of patients, potentially establishing adjuvant nivolumab as a new standard of care.”

However, the invited discussant raised several issues with the trial design. Preoperative chemoradiation is not “universally accepted” as the standard of care in this setting, disease-free survival is not currently validated as a major endpoint in gastroesophageal cancers, and the median follow-up was short, commented Andrés Cervantes, MD, PhD, University of Valencia (Spain), and president-elect of ESMO.

In addition, there was no differentiation between esophageal squamous cell and adenocarcinoma histologies.

Nevertheless, CheckMate 577 is the first positive adjuvant study for checkpoint inhibitors in gastrointestinal tumors and, crucially, the results “are independent of PD-L1 status,” Dr. Cervantes said.

CheckMate 649 was funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb. ATTRACTION-4 was funded by Ono Pharmaceutical and Bristol-Myers Squibb. CheckMate 577 was funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb. Many of the presenters reported relationships with pharmaceutical companies.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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