BMC Cancer (Jan 2022)

Clinical features as potential prognostic factors in patients treated with nivolumab for highly pretreated metastatic gastric cancer: a multicenter retrospective study

  • Akihiko Sano,
  • Makoto Sohda,
  • Nobuhiro Nakazawa,
  • Yasunari Ubukata,
  • Kengo Kuriyama,
  • Akiharu Kimura,
  • Norimichi Kogure,
  • Hisashi Hosaka,
  • Atsushi Naganuma,
  • Masanori Sekiguchi,
  • Kana Saito,
  • Kyoichi Ogata,
  • Makoto Sakai,
  • Hiroomi Ogawa,
  • Ken Shirabe,
  • Hiroshi Saeki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-021-09118-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Background Although nivolumab (anti-programmed cell death-1 antibody) is a promising approach for advanced gastric cancer (AGC), the response rate remains limited. The aim of this multicenter retrospective study was to determine if clinical features could serve as prognostic factors of the efficacy of nivolumab in patients with AGC. Methods Fifty-eight patients with AGC who were treated with nivolumab as a third or later line from October 2017 to December 2018 at any of five clinical sites were enrolled in the study. The correlation between the best overall response and clinical features was investigated. Overall survival and progression-free survival after initiation of nivolumab were calculated and clinical features that could be predictors of the prognosis were sought. Results The disease control rate (DCR) for nivolumab was 36.2% and was significantly correlated with performance status (p = 0.021), metastasis to one organ (p = 0.006), and grade 2 or higher immune-related adverse events (p = 0.027). There was also a significant association between response to nivolumab and ability to receive subsequent chemotherapy (p = 0.022). In the analysis of overall survival, the following variables were identified as being significantly associated with a poor outcome: Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status ≥1, prior treatment with trastuzumab, no immune-related adverse events, lack of a response to nivolumab, and inability to receive subsequent chemotherapy. Conclusion The findings of this study suggest that nivolumab may be ineffective for AGC in patients with poor performance status and those with a history of treatment with trastuzumab.

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