Nature Communications (Aug 2024)

Cryoablation and post-progression immune checkpoint inhibition in metastatic melanoma: a phase II trial

  • Meghan J. Mooradian,
  • Florian J. Fintelmann,
  • Thomas J. LaSalle,
  • Judit Simon,
  • Alexander Graur,
  • Alona Muzikansky,
  • Mari Mino-Kenudson,
  • Sophia Shalhout,
  • Howard L. Kaufman,
  • Russell W. Jenkins,
  • Donald Lawrence,
  • Aleigha Lawless,
  • Tatyana Sharova,
  • Raul N. Uppot,
  • Jacy Fang,
  • Emily M. Blaum,
  • Anna L. K. Gonye,
  • Irena Gushterova,
  • Genevieve M. Boland,
  • Christopher Azzoli,
  • Nir Hacohen,
  • Moshe Sade-Feldman,
  • Ryan J. Sullivan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-51722-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Image-guided percutaneous cryoablation is an established minimally invasive oncologic treatment. We hypothesized that cryoablation may modify the immune microenvironment through direct modulation of the tumor, thereby generating an anti-tumor response in tumors refractory to immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI). In this non-randomized phase II single-center study (NCT03290677), subjects with unresectable melanoma progressing on ICI underwent cryoablation of an enlarging metastasis, and ICI was continued for a minimum of two additional cycles. The primary endpoints were safety, feasibility and tumor response in non-ablated lesions. From May 2018 through July 2020, 17 patients were treated on study. The study met its primary endpoints with the combination strategy found to be safe and feasible with an objective response rate of 23.5% and disease control rate of 41% (4 partial response, 3 stable disease). Our data support further study of this synergistic therapeutic approach.