4.7 Article

Clinical activity of checkpoint inhibitors in angiosarcoma: A retrospective cohort study

Journal

CANCER
Volume 128, Issue 18, Pages 3383-3391

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.34370

Keywords

angiosarcoma; anti-PD-1 antibody; immunotherapy; pembrolizumab; soft tissue sarcoma

Categories

Funding

  1. Maynard Cardiac Sarcoma Initiative

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This retrospective study assessed the clinical activity of pembrolizumab monotherapy in patients with angiosarcoma. The results showed durable clinical activity of pembrolizumab in angiosarcoma, indicating a high probability of success for checkpoint inhibition as monotherapy or combination therapy.
Background Systemic treatments for angiosarcoma remains an area of unmet clinical need. The authors conducted this retrospective study to assess the clinical activity of checkpoint inhibitors in patients with angiosarcoma. The primary objective was to assess the objective response rate, and the secondary objective was to assess the progression-free and overall survival durations and disease control rate. Methods Patient data were obtained using The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Tumor Registry database. The final study population was refined to only include patients who had undergone pembrolizumab monotherapy. The objective response rate was evaluated using RECIST/irRECIST version 1.1. Progression-free survival and overall survival were defined as the time from the initiation of immunotherapy to disease progression or recurrence, death, or last follow-up and to death or last follow-up, respectively. Results The final cohort comprised 25 patients. Most patients had metastatic disease (72%) and had undergone at least two lines of systemic therapy (80%) before starting pembrolizumab. The objective response rate was 18%, whereas the disease control rate was 59%. The median progression-free survival duration was 6.2 months and was not significantly different between the cutaneous (4.7 months) and visceral angiosarcoma (6.2 months) groups (p = .42). The median overall survival duration was 72.6 months. Toxicities were recorded for eight patients, with fatigue, anemia, constipation, and rash being the most common. Conclusions Pembrolizumab shows durable clinical activity in angiosarcoma. These findings suggest that checkpoint inhibition as monotherapy or combination therapy is likely to have a high probability of success.(c) 2022 American Cancer Society.

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