Nivolumab plus chemotherapy or ipilimumab in gastroesophageal cancer: Exploratory biomarker analyses of a randomized phase 3 trial Journal Article


Authors: Shitara, K.; Janjigian, Y. Y.; Ajani, J.; Moehler, M.; Yao, J.; Wang, X.; Chhibber, A.; Pandya, D.; Shen, L.; Garrido, M.; Gallardo, C.; Wyrwicz, L.; Yamaguchi, K.; Skoczylas, T.; Bragagnoli, A.; Liu, T.; Schenker, M.; Yañez, P.; Kowalyszyn, R.; Karamouzis, M.; Zander, T.; Feeney, K.; Elimova, E.; Doshi, P.; Li, M.; Lei, M.
Article Title: Nivolumab plus chemotherapy or ipilimumab in gastroesophageal cancer: Exploratory biomarker analyses of a randomized phase 3 trial
Abstract: First-line nivolumab-plus-chemotherapy demonstrated superior overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival versus chemotherapy for advanced gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma with programmed death ligand 1 combined positive score ≥ 5, meeting both primary end points of the randomized phase 3 CheckMate 649 trial. Nivolumab-plus-ipilimumab provided durable responses and higher survival rates versus chemotherapy; however, the prespecified OS significance boundary was not met. To identify biomarkers predictive of differential efficacy outcomes, post hoc exploratory analyses were performed using whole-exome sequencing and RNA sequencing. Nivolumab-based therapies demonstrated improved efficacy versus chemotherapy in hypermutated and, to a lesser degree, Epstein–Barr virus-positive tumors compared with chromosomally unstable and genomically stable tumors. Within the KRAS-altered subgroup, only patients treated with nivolumab-plus-chemotherapy demonstrated improved OS benefit versus chemotherapy. Low stroma gene expression signature scores were associated with OS benefit with nivolumab-based regimens; high regulatory T cell signatures were associated with OS benefit only with nivolumab-plus-ipilimumab. Our analyses suggest that distinct and overlapping pathways contribute to the efficacy of nivolumab-based regimens in gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma. © The Author(s) 2025.
Journal Title: Nature Medicine
Volume: 31
Issue: 5
ISSN: 1078-8956
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2025-05-01
Start Page: 1519
End Page: 1530
Language: English
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-025-03575-0
PUBMED: 40055521
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC12092258
DOI/URL:
Notes: Source: Scopus
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  1. Yelena Yuriy Janjigian
    395 Janjigian