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Cytokine biomarkers to predict antitumor responses to nivolumab suggested in a phase 2 study for advanced melanoma

Promising antitumor activities of nivolumab, a fully humanized IgG4 inhibitor antibody against the programmed death‐1 protein, were suggested in previous phase 1 studies. The present phase 2, single‐arm study (JAPIC‐CTI #111681) evaluated the antitumor activities of nivolumab and explored its predic...

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Autores principales: Yamazaki, Naoya, Kiyohara, Yoshio, Uhara, Hisashi, Iizuka, Hajime, Uehara, Jiro, Otsuka, Fujio, Fujisawa, Yasuhiro, Takenouchi, Tatsuya, Isei, Taiki, Iwatsuki, Keiji, Uchi, Hiroshi, Ihn, Hironobu, Minami, Hironobu, Tahara, Hideaki
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5448619/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28266140
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cas.13226
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author Yamazaki, Naoya
Kiyohara, Yoshio
Uhara, Hisashi
Iizuka, Hajime
Uehara, Jiro
Otsuka, Fujio
Fujisawa, Yasuhiro
Takenouchi, Tatsuya
Isei, Taiki
Iwatsuki, Keiji
Uchi, Hiroshi
Ihn, Hironobu
Minami, Hironobu
Tahara, Hideaki
author_facet Yamazaki, Naoya
Kiyohara, Yoshio
Uhara, Hisashi
Iizuka, Hajime
Uehara, Jiro
Otsuka, Fujio
Fujisawa, Yasuhiro
Takenouchi, Tatsuya
Isei, Taiki
Iwatsuki, Keiji
Uchi, Hiroshi
Ihn, Hironobu
Minami, Hironobu
Tahara, Hideaki
author_sort Yamazaki, Naoya
collection PubMed
description Promising antitumor activities of nivolumab, a fully humanized IgG4 inhibitor antibody against the programmed death‐1 protein, were suggested in previous phase 1 studies. The present phase 2, single‐arm study (JAPIC‐CTI #111681) evaluated the antitumor activities of nivolumab and explored its predictive correlates in advanced melanoma patients at 11 sites in Japan. Intravenous nivolumab 2 mg/kg was given repeatedly at 3‐week intervals to 35 of 37 patients enrolled from December 2011 to May 2012 until they experienced unacceptable toxicity, disease progression, or complete response. Primary endpoint was objective response rate. Serum levels of immune modulators were assessed at multiple time points. As of 21 October 2014, median response duration, median progression‐free survival, and median overall survival were 463 days, 169 days, and 18.0 months, respectively. The overall response rate and 1‐ and 2‐year survival rates were 28.6%, 54.3%, and 42.9%, respectively. Thirteen patients remained alive at the end of the observation period and no deaths were drug related. Grade 3–4 drug‐related adverse events were observed in 31.4% of patients. Pretreatment serum interferon‐γ, and interleukin‐6 and ‐10 levels were significantly higher in the patients with objective tumor responses than in those with tumor progression. In conclusion, giving repeated i.v. nivolumab had potent and durable antitumor effects and a manageable safety profile in advanced melanoma patients, strongly suggesting the usefulness of nivolumab for advanced melanoma and the usefulness of pretreatment serum cytokine profiles as correlates for predicting treatment efficacy.
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spelling pubmed-54486192017-06-01 Cytokine biomarkers to predict antitumor responses to nivolumab suggested in a phase 2 study for advanced melanoma Yamazaki, Naoya Kiyohara, Yoshio Uhara, Hisashi Iizuka, Hajime Uehara, Jiro Otsuka, Fujio Fujisawa, Yasuhiro Takenouchi, Tatsuya Isei, Taiki Iwatsuki, Keiji Uchi, Hiroshi Ihn, Hironobu Minami, Hironobu Tahara, Hideaki Cancer Sci Original Articles Promising antitumor activities of nivolumab, a fully humanized IgG4 inhibitor antibody against the programmed death‐1 protein, were suggested in previous phase 1 studies. The present phase 2, single‐arm study (JAPIC‐CTI #111681) evaluated the antitumor activities of nivolumab and explored its predictive correlates in advanced melanoma patients at 11 sites in Japan. Intravenous nivolumab 2 mg/kg was given repeatedly at 3‐week intervals to 35 of 37 patients enrolled from December 2011 to May 2012 until they experienced unacceptable toxicity, disease progression, or complete response. Primary endpoint was objective response rate. Serum levels of immune modulators were assessed at multiple time points. As of 21 October 2014, median response duration, median progression‐free survival, and median overall survival were 463 days, 169 days, and 18.0 months, respectively. The overall response rate and 1‐ and 2‐year survival rates were 28.6%, 54.3%, and 42.9%, respectively. Thirteen patients remained alive at the end of the observation period and no deaths were drug related. Grade 3–4 drug‐related adverse events were observed in 31.4% of patients. Pretreatment serum interferon‐γ, and interleukin‐6 and ‐10 levels were significantly higher in the patients with objective tumor responses than in those with tumor progression. In conclusion, giving repeated i.v. nivolumab had potent and durable antitumor effects and a manageable safety profile in advanced melanoma patients, strongly suggesting the usefulness of nivolumab for advanced melanoma and the usefulness of pretreatment serum cytokine profiles as correlates for predicting treatment efficacy. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017-05-11 2017-05 /pmc/articles/PMC5448619/ /pubmed/28266140 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cas.13226 Text en © 2017 The Authors. Cancer Science published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Japanese Cancer Association. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial‐NoDerivs (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Yamazaki, Naoya
Kiyohara, Yoshio
Uhara, Hisashi
Iizuka, Hajime
Uehara, Jiro
Otsuka, Fujio
Fujisawa, Yasuhiro
Takenouchi, Tatsuya
Isei, Taiki
Iwatsuki, Keiji
Uchi, Hiroshi
Ihn, Hironobu
Minami, Hironobu
Tahara, Hideaki
Cytokine biomarkers to predict antitumor responses to nivolumab suggested in a phase 2 study for advanced melanoma
title Cytokine biomarkers to predict antitumor responses to nivolumab suggested in a phase 2 study for advanced melanoma
title_full Cytokine biomarkers to predict antitumor responses to nivolumab suggested in a phase 2 study for advanced melanoma
title_fullStr Cytokine biomarkers to predict antitumor responses to nivolumab suggested in a phase 2 study for advanced melanoma
title_full_unstemmed Cytokine biomarkers to predict antitumor responses to nivolumab suggested in a phase 2 study for advanced melanoma
title_short Cytokine biomarkers to predict antitumor responses to nivolumab suggested in a phase 2 study for advanced melanoma
title_sort cytokine biomarkers to predict antitumor responses to nivolumab suggested in a phase 2 study for advanced melanoma
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5448619/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28266140
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cas.13226
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