Affiliation:
1. Key Laboratory of Carcinogenesis and Translational Research (Ministry of Education, Beijing), Department of Melanoma and Sarcoma Peking University Cancer Hospital and Institute Beijing China
2. Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center Harvard Medical School Boston MA USA
3. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Weill Cornell Medical College New York NY USA
4. Department of Medical Oncology Shanxi Bethune Hospital Shanxi China
5. Department of Medicine Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville TN USA
6. Melanoma Institute Australia The University of Sydney, Royal North Shore and Mater Hospitals Sydney Australia
7. Department of Surgery Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School Boston MA USA
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Programmed cell death receptor-1 (PD-1) monotherapy is a standard treatment for advanced cutaneous melanoma, but its efficacy and toxicity are defined in white populations and remain poorly characterized in other ethnic groups, such as East Asian, Hispanic and African.
Objectives
To determine the efficacy and toxicity of PD-1 monotherapy in different ethnic groups.
Methods
Clinical data for patients with unresectable or advanced melanoma treated with anti-PD-1 monotherapy between 2009 and 2019 were collected retrospectively from five independent institutions in the USA, Australia and China. Tumour response, survival and immune-related adverse events (irAEs) were compared by ethnicity (white vs. East Asian/Hispanic/African) across different melanoma subtypes: nonacral cutaneous (NAC)/unknown primary (UP) and acral/mucosal/uveal.
Results
In total, 1135 patients were included. White patients had significantly higher objective response rate (ORR) [54%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 50–57% vs. 20%, 95% CI 13–28%; adjusted P < 0·001] and longer progression-free survival (14·2 months, 95% CI 10·7–20·3 vs. 5·4 months, 95% CI 4·5–7·0; adjusted P < 0·001) than East Asian, Hispanic and African patients in the NAC and UP subtypes. White ethnicity remained independently associated with a higher ORR (odds ratio 4·10, 95% CI 2·48–6·81; adjusted P < 0·001) and longer PFS (hazard ratio 0·58, 95% CI 0·46–0·74; adjusted P < 0·001) in multivariate analyses after adjustment for age, sex, primary anatomical location, metastasis stage, baseline lactate dehydrogenase level, mutational status and prior systemic treatment. White and East Asian/Hispanic/African patients shared similar ORR and progression-free survival in acral/mucosal/uveal melanomas. Similar melanoma-subtype-specific ethnic discrepancies were observed in complete response rate and overall survival. White patients had higher rates of gastrointestinal irAEs but lower rates of endocrine, liver and other rare types of irAEs. These differences in irAEs by ethnicity were not attributable to varying melanoma subtypes.
Conclusions
Ethnic discrepancy in clinical benefit is specific to melanoma subtype, and East Asian, Hispanic and African patients with NAC and UP melanomas have poorer clinical benefits than previously recognized. The ethnic discrepancy in toxicity observed across different melanoma subtypes warrants an ethnicity-based irAE surveillance strategy. More research is needed to elucidate the molecular and immunological determinants of these differences.
What is already known about this topic? There is a great difference in response to immunotherapy between different subtypes of melanoma (cutaneous, mucosal, acral and uveal) in patients with advanced disease.
What does this study add? Our data show for the first time that there are differences between different ethnic groups in terms of both response and toxicity to immunotherapy beyond the well-appreciated discrepancies due to melanoma subtype.
Funder
Beijing Hospitals Authority
Bejing Municipal Natural Science Foundation
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
27 articles.
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