Nature Communications (Sep 2023)

Guadecitabine plus ipilimumab in unresectable melanoma: five-year follow-up and integrated multi-omic analysis in the phase 1b NIBIT-M4 trial

  • Teresa Maria Rosaria Noviello,
  • Anna Maria Di Giacomo,
  • Francesca Pia Caruso,
  • Alessia Covre,
  • Roberta Mortarini,
  • Giovanni Scala,
  • Maria Claudia Costa,
  • Sandra Coral,
  • Wolf H. Fridman,
  • Catherine Sautès-Fridman,
  • Silvia Brich,
  • Giancarlo Pruneri,
  • Elena Simonetti,
  • Maria Fortunata Lofiego,
  • Rossella Tufano,
  • Davide Bedognetti,
  • Andrea Anichini,
  • Michele Maio,
  • Michele Ceccarelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-40994-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Association with hypomethylating agents is a promising strategy to improve the efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors-based therapy. The NIBIT-M4 was a phase Ib, dose-escalation trial in patients with advanced melanoma of the hypomethylating agent guadecitabine combined with the anti-CTLA-4 antibody ipilimumab that followed a traditional 3 + 3 design (NCT02608437). Patients received guadecitabine 30, 45 or 60 mg/m2/day subcutaneously on days 1 to 5 every 3 weeks starting on week 0 for a total of four cycles, and ipilimumab 3 mg/kg intravenously starting on day 1 of week 1 every 3 weeks for a total of four cycles. Primary outcomes of safety, tolerability, and maximum tolerated dose of treatment were previously reported. Here we report the 5-year clinical outcome for the secondary endpoints of overall survival, progression free survival, and duration of response, and an exploratory integrated multi-omics analysis on pre- and on-treatment tumor biopsies. With a minimum follow-up of 45 months, the 5-year overall survival rate was 28.9% and the median duration of response was 20.6 months. Re-expression of immuno-modulatory endogenous retroviruses and of other repetitive elements, and a mechanistic signature of guadecitabine are associated with response. Integration of a genetic immunoediting index with an adaptive immunity signature stratifies patients/lesions into four distinct subsets and discriminates 5-year overall survival and progression free survival. These results suggest that coupling genetic immunoediting with activation of adaptive immunity is a relevant requisite for achieving long term clinical benefit by epigenetic immunomodulation in advanced melanoma patients.