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SOLTI-1904 ACROPOLI TRIAL: efficacy of spartalizumab monotherapy across tumor-types expressing high levels of PD1 mRNA.

Aleix PratLuis G Paz-AresManel JuanEnriqueta Felip FontElena GarraldaBlanca Gonzalez-FarreAna M AranceJuan Martín-LiberalJoaquín GaviláAna López-GonzálezJuan Miguel CejalvoYann IzarzugazaKepa AmillanoJavier García CorbachoCristina SauraFabricio RaccaCinta HierroEsther SanfeliuXavier GonzalezJordi CanesGuillermo VillacampaFernando SalvadorTomás PascualRicard MesíaAndres CervantesJosep Tabernero
Published in: Future oncology (London, England) (2022)
Improved selection of cancer patients who are most likely to respond to immune checkpoint inhibitors remains an unmet clinical need. Recently, a positive correlation between levels of PD1 mRNA and clinical outcome in response to PD1 blockade across diverse tumor histologies has been confirmed in several datasets. ACROPOLI is a parallel cohort, non-randomized, phase II study that aims to evaluate the efficacy of the anti-PD1 immune checkpoint inhibitor spartalizumab as monotherapy in metastatic patients with solid tumors that express high levels of PD1 (cohort 1; n = 111). An additional cohort of 30 patients with tumors expressing low levels of PD1 , where PD1/PD-L1 antibodies in monotherapy are standard treatment, will also be included (cohort 2). Primary end point is overall response rate in cohort 1. Trial registration number: NCT04802876 (ClinicalTrials.gov).
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