SWOG/NCI Phase II Dual Anti–CTLA-4/PD-1 Blockade in Rare Tumors: Nonepithelial Ovarian Cancer

Young Kwang Chae & Razelle Kurzrock et al.

Abstract

Purpose:

The role of dual checkpoint inhibition (ipilimumab at 1 mg/kg intravenously every 6 weeks and nivolumab at 240 mg intravenously every 2 weeks) in advanced rare/ultrarare nonepithelial ovarian cancers is yet to be explored.

Patients and Methods:

Dual anti–CTLA-4 and anti–PD-1 blockade in rare tumor is a prospective, multicenter (1,016 US sites), multicohort, single-arm phase II trial conducted through the Early Therapeutics and Rare Cancer SWOG/NCI Committee, assessing ipilimumab (anti–CTLA-4; 1 mg/kg every 6 weeks) and nivolumab (anti–PD-1; 240 mg every 2 weeks) in adults with advanced nonepithelial ovarian cancers who lack beneficial standard therapy. The primary outcome was overall response rate [ORR; complete response (CR)/partial response (PR)]; secondary outcomes were progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival, clinical benefit rate [stable disease (SD) ≥6 months plus ORR], and toxicity.

Results:

Seventeen patients (median age: 64; number of prior therapies ranged from 0 to 8 with no immunotherapy exposure; eight granulosa, six carcinosarcomas, one Sertoli–Leydig, one yolk sac, and one Wolffian) were evaluated. In granulosa cell tumors, ORR was 25% (n = 2/8; one CR and one PR) and clinical benefit rate was 50% (n = 4/8); PFS was 58.3 (CR), 50.7+ (PR), 30.4 (SD), and 8.7 (SD) months. Median PFS was 3.5 months [95% confidence interval, 1.7–11.2 months]; median overall survival was 42.5 months (95% confidence interval, 10.1 months–not reached). One Sertoli–Leydig cell tumor showed a 22% regression (PFS, 11.2 months). Carcinosarcomas had no response. Three participants (18%) discontinued treatment due to grade 3 to grade 4 adverse events.

Conclusions:

Ipilimumab–nivolumab shows activity in treatment-refractory granulosa cell tumors, with 25% (n = 2/8) of patients experiencing either CR or PR lasting more than 4 years.

Authors
Young Kwang Chae, Megan Othus, Sandip Pravin Patel, Kelly J. Wilkinson, Emily M. Whitman-Purves, Jayanthi Lea, John M. Schallenkamp, Nabil Adra, Leonard J. Appleman, Mitchell Alden, Jessica Thomes Pepin, John A. Ellerton, Andrew Poklepovic, Adam Walter, Murtuza M. Rampurwala, William R. Robinson, Hye Sung Kim, Liam Il-Young Chung, Christine M. McLeod, Gabby Lopez, Helen X. Chen, Elad Sharon, Howard Streicher, Christopher W. Ryan, Charles D. Blanke, Razelle Kurzrock
Funding

NCI NIH HHS

U10 CA180868

NCI NIH HHS

U10 CA180821

NCI NIH HHS

UG1 CA233198

NCI NIH HHS

U10 CA180820

NCI NIH HHS

U10 CA180888

NCI NIH HHS

U10 CA180819

Center for Cancer Research (CCR)

U10CA180819

NCI NIH HHS

UG1 CA233320

NCI NIH HHS

UG1 CA189872

Bristol Myers Squibb Foundation (BMSF)

Center for Cancer Research (CCR)

U10CA180888

NCI NIH HHS

UG1 CA189954

Center for Cancer Research

U10CA180888

Center for Cancer Research

U10CA180819

Center for Cancer Research

U10CA180820

Center for Cancer Research

U10180821

Center for Cancer Research

U10CA180868

Center for Cancer Research

UG1CA189954

Center for Cancer Research

UG1CA233320

Center for Cancer Research

UG1CA233198

Center for Cancer Research

UG1CA189872

Bristol Myers Squibb Foundation