Lesion-level heterogeneity of radiologic progression in patients treated with pembrolizumab Journal Article


Authors: Topp, B. G.; Thiagarajan, K.; De Alwis, D. P.; Snyder, A.; Hellmann, M. D.
Article Title: Lesion-level heterogeneity of radiologic progression in patients treated with pembrolizumab
Abstract: Background: Disease progression is often considered a binary state reflecting presence or absence of response. Meaningful heterogeneity between metastatic sites of a given patient may exist, however, and may impact therapeutic outcomes. To characterize the heterogeneity of progression with immunotherapy, we evaluated lesion-level dynamics of pembrolizumab-treated patients across three tumor types. Patients and methods: Individual metastatic lesion dynamics were analyzed retrospectively in patients with advanced melanoma, non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and gastric or gastroesophageal junction (G/GEJ) cancer who received pembrolizumab in KEYNOTE-001 or KEYNOTE-059. Primary progression was defined as radiologic progression as per RECIST v1.1 occurring at the first on-treatment study scan (∼9-12 weeks, +2-week window) and secondary progression as progression occurring beyond the first scan (∼14 weeks and beyond). The change in sum of target lesions and of individual lesions was examined, as were patterns and timing of progression. Results: 9239 individual lesions from 1194 patients were analyzed. Among patients with primary progression [39% (200/511) of patients with melanoma, 41% (179/432) with NSCLC, 61% (154/251) with G/GEJ cancer], most patients (51%-63%) had a mixture of growing, stable, and shrinking lesions. Despite overall primary progression, a minority of patients (19%-25%) had tumor growth at every metastatic site and 17%-32% had ≥1 shrinking lesion. Among patients with secondary progression [22% (113/511) of patients with melanoma, 27% (117/432) with NSCLC, 18% (44/251) with G/GEJ cancer], few patients had rebound growth (>20% increase in diameter from nadir) in all lesions whereas the majority (74%-84%) had sustained regression in ≥1 lesion. Conclusions: Lesion-level heterogeneity at the time of disease progression was common in pembrolizumab-treated patients, with many patients demonstrating ongoing disease control in a subset of tumor sites. These results may inform clinical decision-making, trial design, and tumor sampling in the future. © 2021 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., The Author(s)
Keywords: melanoma; progression; non-small-cell lung cancer; gastric cancer; gastroesophageal junction cancer; intertumoral heterogeneity
Journal Title: Annals of Oncology
Volume: 32
Issue: 12
ISSN: 0923-7534
Publisher: Oxford University Press  
Date Published: 2021-12-01
Start Page: 1618
End Page: 1625
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.annonc.2021.09.006
PUBMED: 34543717
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 December 2021 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Matthew David Hellmann
    411 Hellmann