Objective <p>To evaluate the real-world safety and efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) in Japanese patients with persistent, recurrent, or metastatic cervical cancer.</p> Methods <p>In this multicenter observational study at four Japanese institutions, 100 patients with recurrent, persistent, or advanced cervical cancer received pembrolizumab or cemiplimab. Primary endpoints were objective response rate (ORR) and the incidence of immune-mediated adverse events (imAEs) and grade 3–5 AEs. Secondary endpoints were progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). Logistic and Cox regression were used to explore prognostic factors.</p> Results <p>Eighteen patients (18%) achieved complete response and 44 (44%) partial response, yielding an ORR of 62.0% and a disease control rate of 77.0%. Median PFS and OS were 10.4 and 22.0&#xa0;months, respectively. ORR was 74.0% in the first-line setting and 29.6% in the second-line setting. Among patients who met KEYNOTE-826 eligibility criteria, ORR was 82.9% and median PFS 16.1&#xa0;months. Cemiplimab, which was mainly used as off-label retreatment in frail or previously ICI-exposed patients, showed limited activity (ORR 5.6%). ImAEs occurred in 45.0% of patients, with grade 3–5 events in 19.0% and six treatment-related deaths. Poor performance status and recurrent disease were associated with lower response and shorter PFS, whereas PD-L1 tumor proportion score ≥ 50% and grade 3–5 imAEs were associated with longer PFS.</p> Conclusion <p>In this real-world cohort, ICIs, particularly pembrolizumab, demonstrated substantial antitumor activity with acceptable toxicity in Japanese patients with advanced cervical cancer, especially when used as first-line therapy and in patients fulfilling KEYNOTE-826 eligibility criteria.</p>

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Real-world safety and efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors in Japanese patients with persistent, recurrent, or metastatic cervical cancer: a multicenter prospective and retrospective study

  • Kazuhisa Kitami,
  • Shiho Kuji,
  • Natsuko Kamiya,
  • Hiroko Machida,
  • Junki Koike,
  • Reiko Watanabe,
  • Takeshi Hirasawa,
  • Nao Suzuki,
  • Etsuko Miyagi,
  • Kazuyoshi Kato

摘要

Objective

To evaluate the real-world safety and efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) in Japanese patients with persistent, recurrent, or metastatic cervical cancer.

Methods

In this multicenter observational study at four Japanese institutions, 100 patients with recurrent, persistent, or advanced cervical cancer received pembrolizumab or cemiplimab. Primary endpoints were objective response rate (ORR) and the incidence of immune-mediated adverse events (imAEs) and grade 3–5 AEs. Secondary endpoints were progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). Logistic and Cox regression were used to explore prognostic factors.

Results

Eighteen patients (18%) achieved complete response and 44 (44%) partial response, yielding an ORR of 62.0% and a disease control rate of 77.0%. Median PFS and OS were 10.4 and 22.0 months, respectively. ORR was 74.0% in the first-line setting and 29.6% in the second-line setting. Among patients who met KEYNOTE-826 eligibility criteria, ORR was 82.9% and median PFS 16.1 months. Cemiplimab, which was mainly used as off-label retreatment in frail or previously ICI-exposed patients, showed limited activity (ORR 5.6%). ImAEs occurred in 45.0% of patients, with grade 3–5 events in 19.0% and six treatment-related deaths. Poor performance status and recurrent disease were associated with lower response and shorter PFS, whereas PD-L1 tumor proportion score ≥ 50% and grade 3–5 imAEs were associated with longer PFS.

Conclusion

In this real-world cohort, ICIs, particularly pembrolizumab, demonstrated substantial antitumor activity with acceptable toxicity in Japanese patients with advanced cervical cancer, especially when used as first-line therapy and in patients fulfilling KEYNOTE-826 eligibility criteria.