Survival, Durable Tumor Remission, and Long-Term Safety in Patients With Advanced Melanoma Receiving Nivolumab
Johns Hopkins University · Smilow Cancer Hospital
Abstract
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.
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
- FWCI
- 23.66
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 0
Authors
21- SLSuzanne L. TopalianCorresponding
Johns Hopkins University, Smilow Cancer Hospital
- MSMario Sznol
Johns Hopkins University, Smilow Cancer Hospital
- DFDavid F. McDermott
Johns Hopkins University, Smilow Cancer Hospital
- HMHarriet M. Kluger
Johns Hopkins University, Smilow Cancer Hospital
- RDRichard D. Carvajal
Johns Hopkins University, Smilow Cancer Hospital
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Nivolumab
- Discontinuation
- Melanoma
- Internal medicine
- Refractory (planetary science)
- Oncology
- Survival analysis
- Good health and well-being