Ipilimumab efficacy and safety in patients with advanced melanoma: A retrospective analysis of HLA subtype from four trials Journal Article


Authors: Wolchok, J. D.; Weber, J. S.; Hamid, O.; Lebbé, C.; Maio, M.; Schadendorf, D.; de Pril, V.; Heller, K.; Chen, T. T.; Ibrahim, R.; Hoos, A.; O'Day, S. J.
Article Title: Ipilimumab efficacy and safety in patients with advanced melanoma: A retrospective analysis of HLA subtype from four trials
Abstract: Ipilimumab is a fully human, monoclonal antibody that blocks cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen-4 to potentiate an antitumor T-cell response. This agent improved overall survival in a phase III trial in previously treated patients with advanced melanoma. Because the mechanism of action for ipilimumab is thought to be HLA independent, most trials enrolled patients without regard to HLA subtype. However, enrollment in the phase III trial was restricted to class-I HLA-A*0201-positive patients because two of the three arms contained an HLA-A*0201-restricted gp100 vaccine. HLA typing was also performed prospectively in several phase II trials and was available for 93.5% of patients. In this retrospective analysis, pooled efficacy and safety data are presented according to HLA-A*0201 status and dose from pretreated patients randomized to 0.3, 3, or 10 mg/kg ipilimumab in four phase II trials. Median overall survival (OS) was similar for the 187 HLA-A*0201-positive [9.3 months, 95% CI (confidence interval) 7.4-11.5] and 266 HLA-A*0201- negative patients [11.4 months, 95% CI 9.3-15.1] randomized to ipilimumab at all doses across the four phase II trials. These data are comparable to the OS for the 137 HLA-A*0201-positive patients randomized to ipilimumab in the phase III study [10.1 months, 95% CI 8.0-13.8]. Ipilimumab-induced adverse events and immune-related adverse events (skin, gastrointestinal, hepatic, other) also occurred at similar frequencies among patients in the phase II and III trials, regardless of HLA-A*0201 status. These findings support the hypothesis that ipilimumab-treated patients with advanced melanoma have similar outcomes regardless of their HLA-A*0201 status. © 2010 by Jedd D. Wolchok.
Keywords: controlled study; treatment outcome; survival rate; overall survival; clinical trial; placebo; advanced cancer; dose response; drug efficacy; drug safety; monotherapy; outcome assessment; glycoprotein gp 100; ipilimumab; melanoma; multiple cycle treatment; retrospective study; drug dose escalation; confidence interval; survival time; drug mechanism; liver disease; skin disease; immune deficiency; disease control; hla typing; gastrointestinal disease; hla antigen; hla system; hla; budesonide
Journal Title: Cancer Immunity
Volume: 10
ISSN: 1424-9634
Publisher: Academy of Cancer Immunology  
Date Published: 2010-10-20
Start Page: 9
Language: English
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC2964017
PUBMED: 20957980
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 20 April 2011" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Jedd D Wolchok
    905 Wolchok