Investigator

Cong Wang

Shandong Tumor Hospital

Research Interests

CWCong Wang
Papers(2)
Molecular and Immune …PD-1 inhibitor plus c…
Collaborators(10)
Dan HuFei ZhuHuai-Wu LuHuaiwu LuHuiqi ZhangJing LiuLele ChangLele ZangLi ChenLi Li
Institutions(7)
Shandong Tumor Hospit…Fujian Medical Univer…Union HospitalSun Yat Sen Memorial …Chengdu University of…Sun Yat-sen Universit…Qilu Hospital of Shan…

Papers

Molecular and Immune Correlates of Response to First-Line De-escalated Chemotherapy plus Penpulimab and Anlotinib in Advanced Cervical Cancer

Abstract The standard of care for advanced cervical cancer includes chemotherapy, antiangiogenic, and/or immune checkpoint blockade regimens. Although effective, it leads to pleiotropic side effects. Deescalation chemotherapy together with immunotargeted therapies has been proven effective and less toxic in other cancers. In this study, we conducted a multicenter, single-arm, phase II study of first-line deescalated platinum-based chemotherapy plus anlotinib and penpulimab, followed by maintenance therapy solely with anlotinib and penpulimab in patients with PD-L1–positive, persistent, recurrent, or metastatic cervical cancer. Of 32 efficacy-evaluable patients, 30 (93.8%, 95% confidence interval, 79.2%–99.2%) had an investigator-confirmed objective response. Single-nucleus RNA sequencing implied enhanced chemotaxis and proliferative activity of tumor-infiltrating T cells, and activated germinal center B cells portended optimal treatment response. Patients with a high tertiary lymphoid structure-to-tumor area ratio exhibited better survival. Our findings lay the groundwork for the feasibility of first-line de-escalated chemotherapy plus anlotinib and penpulimab in patients with metastatic, persistent, or recurrent cervical cancer. Significance: We recruited 34 patients with advanced cervical cancer receiving two cycles of platinum-based chemotherapy plus anlotinib and penpulimab, followed by maintenance therapy solely with anlotinib and penpulimab, and showed safety and efficacy of this deescalation regimen. This work highlights the potential for personalized treatment strategies and feasibility of reduced-toxicity regimens.

1Works
2Papers
32Collaborators
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms