Author:
Lynce Filipa,Mainor Candace,Donahue Renee N.,Geng Xue,Jones Greg,Schlam Ilana,Wang Hongkun,Toney Nicole J.,Jochems Caroline,Schlom Jeffrey,Zeck Jay,Gallagher Christopher,Nanda Rita,Graham Deena,Stringer-Reasor Erica M,Denduluri Neelima,Collins Julie,Chitalia Ami,Tiwari Shruti,Nunes Raquel,Kaltman Rebecca,Khoury Katia,Gatti-Mays Margaret,Tarantino Paolo,Tolaney Sara M.,Swain Sandra M,Pohlmann Paula,Parsons Heather A.,Isaacs Claudine
Abstract
AbstractChemotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors have a role in the post-neoadjuvant setting in patients with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). However, the effects of nivolumab, a checkpoint inhibitor, capecitabine, or the combination in changing peripheral immunoscore (PIS) remains unclear. This open-label randomized phase II OXEL study (NCT03487666) aimed to assess the immunologic effects of nivolumab, capecitabine, or the combination in terms of the change in PIS (primary endpoint). Secondary endpoints include the presence of ctDNA, toxicity, clinical outcomes at 2-years and association of ctDNA and PIS with clinical outcomes. Forty-five women with TNBC and residual invasive disease after standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy were randomized to nivolumab, capecitabine, or the combination. Here we show that a combination of nivolumab plus capecitabine leads to a greater increase in PIS from baseline to week 6 (91%) compared with nivolumab (47%) or capecitabine (53%) alone (log-rank p = 0.08), meeting the pre-specified primary endpoint. In addition, the presence of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) was associated with disease recurrence, with no new safety signals in the combination arm. Our results provide efficacy and safety data on this combination in TNBC and support further development of PIS and ctDNA analyses to identify patients at high risk of recurrence.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory