Response to Anti–PD-1 in Uveal Melanoma Without High-Volume Liver Metastasis

Author:

Johnson Douglas B.1,Bao Riyue2,Ancell Kristin K.1,Daniels Anthony B.3,Wallace Deborah1,Sosman Jeffrey A.4,Luke Jason J.2

Affiliation:

1. aDepartment of Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee;

2. bDepartment of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois;

3. cDepartment of Ophthalmology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee; and

4. dDepartment of Medicine, Robert H. Lurie Cancer Center and Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois.

Abstract

Background: Uveal melanoma (UM) is an uncommon melanoma subtype with poor prognosis. Agents that have transformed the management of cutaneous melanoma have made minimal inroads in UM. Methods: We conducted a single-arm phase II study of pembrolizumab in patients with metastatic UM and performed bioinformatics analyses of publicly available datasets to characterize the activity of anti–PD-1 in this setting and to understand the mutational and immunologic profile of this disease. Results: A total of 5 patients received pembrolizumab in this study. Median overall survival was not reached, and median progression-free survival was 11.0 months. One patient experienced a complete response after one dose and 2 others experienced prolonged stable disease (20% response rate, 60% clinical benefit rate); 2 additional patients had rapidly progressing disease. Notably, the patients who benefited had either no liver metastases or small-volume disease, whereas patients with rapidly progressing disease had bulky liver involvement. We performed a bioinformatics analysis of The Cancer Genome Atlas for UM and confirmed a low mutation burden and low rates of T-cell inflammation. Note that the lack of T-cell inflammation strongly correlated with MYC pathway overexpression. Conclusions: Anti–PD-1–based therapy may cause clinical benefit in metastatic UM, seemingly more often in patients without bulky liver metastases. Lack of mutation burden and T-cell infiltration and MYC overexpression may be factors limiting therapeutic responses.ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02359851

Publisher

Harborside Press, LLC

Subject

Oncology

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