Predictive Impact of Tumor Mutational Burden on Real-World Outcomes of First-Line Immune Checkpoint Inhibition in Metastatic Melanoma

Author:

Andrews Miles C.12ORCID,Li Gerald3ORCID,Graf Ryon P.3ORCID,Fisher Virginia A.3ORCID,Mitchell Jerry3ORCID,Aboosaiedi Ali3,O'Rourke Harriet2,Shackleton Mark12,Iddawela Mahesh12,Oxnard Geoffrey R.3ORCID,Huang Richard S.P.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, School of Translational Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia

2. Department of Medical Oncology, Alfred Health, Melbourne, VIC, Australia

3. Foundation Medicine, Cambridge, MA

Abstract

PURPOSE The choice of threshold and reliability of high tumor mutational burden (TMB) to predict outcomes and guide treatment choice for patients with metastatic melanoma receiving first-line immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy in the real world is not well known. METHODS Using a deidentified nationwide (US-based) melanoma clinicogenomic database, we identified a real-world cohort of patients with metastatic melanoma (N = 497) who received first-line monotherapy anti–PD-1 (n = 240) or dual anti–PD-1 and anti–CTLA-4 ICI (n = 257) and had a tissue-based comprehensive genomic profiling test TMB score. RESULTS TMB-high (TMB-H; ≥10 mutations per megabase [muts/Mb], n = 352, 71%) was independently predictive of superior real-world progression-free survival and overall survival versus TMB-low (<10 mut/Mb, n = 145, 29%) in both mono ICI (hazard ratio [HR], 0.45 [95% CI, 0.32 to 0.63]; P < .001; HR, 0.61 [95% CI, 0.41 to 0.90]; P = .01, respectively) and dual ICI (HR, 0.67 [95% CI, 0.49 to 0.90]; P = .009; HR, 0.61 [95% CI, 0.42 to 0.88]; P = .007, respectively) patients. Dual ICI offered no significant advantage in BRAFwt patients and unexpectedly demonstrated greatest benefit in the TMB 10-19 mut/Mb group, identifying a TMB-very high (≥20 mut/Mb, n = 247, 50%) BRAFmut patient subgroup for whom mono ICI may be preferable. CONCLUSION TMB-H predicts superior outcomes on ICI while coassessment of BRAF status and TMB may inform first-line regimen choice.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

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