articleJournal of Clinical OncologyFeb 7, 2023Closed access

Survival, Durable Tumor Remission, and Long-Term Safety in Patients With Advanced Melanoma Receiving Nivolumab

Johns Hopkins University · Smilow Cancer Hospital

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Results

Median overall survival in nivolumab-treated patients (62% with two to five prior systemic therapies) was 16.8 months, and 1- and 2-year survival rates were 62% and 43%, respectively. Among 33 patients with objective tumor regressions (31%), the Kaplan-Meier estimated median response duration was 2 years. Seventeen patients discontinued therapy for reasons other than disease progression, and 12 (71%) of 17 maintained responses off-therapy for at least 16 weeks (range, 16 to 56+ weeks). Objective response and toxicity rates were similar to those reported previously; in an extended analysis of all 306 patients treated on this trial (including those with other cancer types), exposure-adjusted toxicity rates were not cumulative.

Conclusion

Overall survival following nivolumab treatment in patients with advanced treatment-refractory melanoma compares favorably with that in literature studies of similar patient populations. Responses were durable and persisted after drug discontinuation. Long-term safety was acceptable. Ongoing randomized clinical trials will further assess the impact of nivolumab therapy on overall survival in patients with metastatic melanoma.

Citation impact

230
total citations
FWCI
23.66
Percentile
100%
References
0
Citations per year

Authors

21

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Nivolumab
  • Discontinuation
  • Melanoma
  • Internal medicine
  • Refractory (planetary science)
  • Oncology
  • Survival analysis
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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