Aim: To investigate potential association between administration of corticosteroids, antibiotics, probiotics, proton pump inhibitors, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID), statins and metformin and outcome in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated with nivolumab. Patients and Methods: A total of 224 patients with advanced NSCLC treated at nine comprehensive cancer centers were analyzed in this national retrospective study. Survival statistics were evaluated using Kaplan-Meier method and Cox analysis. Results: Only corticosteroid use had a significant negative effect on the objective response rate. In the univariate analysis, there was no significant effect of the studied concomitant medications on the efficacy of nivolumab. In a subsequent multifactorial analysis, a possible positive effect of the concomitant use of NSAID at the initiation of nivolumab treatment was revealed. Conclusion: The results of the present retrospective exploratory analysis underscore the importance of knowing the exact type of concomitant medication, the route of administration, the dose of medication, and the region of the ongoing study. The present data indicated a significantly higher rate of progression in patients treated with corticosteroids and the possible positive effect of NSAID use at the initiation of nivolumab treatment.Nivolumab is a human monoclonal antibody to programmed cell death protein 1 (PD1) that represents a new therapeutic option in the second-line treatment of advanced non-smallcell lung cancer (NSCLC). Improved efficacy with a more favorable adverse event profile has been documented for nivolumab compared to docetaxel in phase III trials. However, the objective response rate of nivolumab monotherapy is only about 20%, with the disease control rate 2209
Aim: To investigate potential associations between clinical and standard peripheral blood biomarkers and clinical outcome in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated with nivolumab. Patients and Methods: A total of 120 patients with advanced NSCLC treated at seven comprehensive cancer care centers were analyzed in this national retrospective study. Survival statistics were evaluated using the Kaplan-Meier method and Cox analysis. Results: Among clinical parameters, histology was significantly associated with progression-free survival. Univariate Cox-proportional hazards model indicated prognostic and predictive role of a panel of laboratory parameters reflecting chronic inflammatory pattern (elevated neutrophil count, neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio, C-reactive protein and decrease in hemoglobin and albumin). Higher serum calcium concentration was also associated with nivolumab treatment effect. Conclusion: Tumor histology was the only clinical parameter predicting the outcome of nivolumab treatment.Among the laboratory parameters, our analysis identified a laboratory panel reflecting chronic inflammation as a potential predictive marker of nivolumab treatment.Nivolumab is a human monoclonal anti-programed cell death 1 (PD-1) therapy that represents a new therapeutic option in the second-line treatment of advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Improved efficacy and a more favorable adverse event profile have been documented for nivolumab compared to docetaxel in phase III studies. However, the objective response rate on nivolumab monotherapy is only about 20%, with the disease control rate reaching approximately 50% (1, 2). Therefore, many patients do not benefit from nivolumab treatment and, taking into account the cost/efficacy ratio, identification of predictive parameters that would aid identification of the most suitable candidates for this therapy remains a topic of high unmet medical need. Much effort has been made to demonstrate that programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression on tumor cells represent, a potential biomarker of response to anti-PD1 therapy (3, 4). However, for nivolumab, this seems to hold true in nonsquamous NSCLC only, although data for other drugs, e.g. pembrolizumab, have demonstrated the predictive role of PD-L1 expression even in patients with squamous histology (5). For various reasons, PD-L1 expression is still not an ideal biomarker (6). Therefore, the search for other predictive biomarkers should continue. Several approaches 6771
BackgroundManagement of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is affected by regional specificities. The present study aimed at determining diagnostic and therapeutic procedures including outcome of patients with NSCLC stage III in the real-world setting in Central European countries to define areas for improvements.Patients and methodsThis multicentre, prospective and non-interventional study collected data of patients with NSCLC stage III in a web-based registry and analysed them centrally.ResultsBetween March 2014 and March 2017, patients (n=583) with the following characteristics were entered: 32% females, 7% never-smokers; ECOG performance status (PS) 0, 1, 2 and 3 in 25%, 58%, 12% and 5%, respectively; 21% prior weight loss; 53% squamous carcinoma, 38% adenocarcinoma; 10% EGFR mutations. Staging procedures included chest X-ray (97% of patients), chest CT (96%), PET-CT (27%), brain imaging (20%), bronchoscopy (89%), endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS) (13%) and CT-guided biopsy (9%). Stages IIIA/IIIB were diagnosed in 55%/45% of patients, respectively. N2/N3 nodes were diagnosed in 60%/23% and pathologically confirmed in 29% of patients. Most patients (56%) were treated by combined modalities. Surgery plus chemotherapy was administered to 20%, definitive chemoradiotherapy to 34%, chemotherapy only to 26%, radiotherapy only to 12% and best supportive care (BSC) to 5% of patients. Median survival and progression-free survival times were 16.8 (15.3;18.5) and 11.2 (10.2;12.2) months, respectively. Stage IIIA, female gender, no weight loss, pathological mediastinal lymph node verification, surgery and combined modality therapy were associated with longer survival.ConclusionsThe real-world study demonstrated a broad heterogeneity in the management o f stage III NSCLC in Central European countries and suggested to increase the rates of PET-CT imaging, brain imaging and invasive mediastinal staging.
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