Investigator

Samantha Breslauer

Technion Israel Institute Of Technology

Research Interests

SBSamantha Breslauer
Papers(1)
De-escalating first-l…
Collaborators(3)
Shira Peleg HassonKeren LevanonRonza Atamneh
Institutions(2)
Technion Israel Insti…Tel Aviv University

Papers

De-escalating first-line treatment in stage IVB or recurrent cervical cancer: outcomes of immunotherapy alone and systemic review

Abstract Introduction Chemo-immunotherapy (IO) is the preferred first-line treatment for stage IVB or recurrent cervical cancer. However, limited data exist on the efficacy and safety of using IO-alone as a de-escalation strategy. We report outcomes from a case series of selected patients treated with IO-alone and review the feasibility of de-escalating first-line treatment. Methods The authors conducted a literature review using Google Scholar and PubMed to identify reports using IO-alone as a de-escalation strategy across malignancies published between 1999 and December 2024 and also reviewed a cervical cancer database from a tertiary academic to identify patients with stage IVB or recurrent disease treated with IO-alone. The authors used the Kaplan-Meier method to estimate progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). Results Among 582 patients treated between 2015 and 2021, 18 met the inclusion criteria. The median age was 43 years (range 28-84); 67% had squamous cell carcinoma, 11% adenocarcinoma, and 80% expressed PD-L1. CPS scores were <1 in 20%, 1--10 in 33%, and >10 in 47%. Most patients had oligo-metastatic disease (83%). Treatment with IO-alone began a median of 7 months after platinum-based chemotherapy. Indications included prior adjuvant (44%) or neoadjuvant (22%) chemotherapy, clinical trial participation (11%), or patient preference (22%). Median PFS and OS were 27 months and 82 months, respectively. Conclusions These findings support the need for clinical trials evaluating IO-alone as a first-line treatment option for de-escalation in stage IVB or recurrent cervical cancer. Biomarker development is needed to better identify candidates for personalized therapy.

1Works
1Papers
3Collaborators
Uterine Cervical NeoplasmsNeoplasm Recurrence, LocalNeoplasm Staging

Education

2026

MD

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

2022

Neuroscience and Behavior

Columbia University