Clinical and biomarker analyses of sintilimab plus gemcitabine and cisplatin as first-line treatment for patients with advanced biliary tract cancer.
Tian-Mei ZengGuang YangCheng LouWei WeiChen-Jie TaoXi-Yun ChenQin HanZhuo ChengPei-Pei ShangYu-Long DongHe-Ming XuLie-Ping GuoDong-Sheng ChenYun-Jie SongChuang QiWang-Long DengZhen-Gang YuanPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
The prognosis of biliary tract cancer (BTC) remains unsatisfactory. This single-arm, phase II clinical trial (ChiCTR2000036652) investigated the efficacy, safety, and predictive biomarkers of sintilimab plus gemcitabine and cisplatin as the first-line treatment for patients with advanced BTCs. The primary endpoint was overall survival (OS). Secondary endpoints included toxicities, progression-free survival (PFS), and objective response rate (ORR); multi-omics biomarkers were assessed as exploratory objective. Thirty patients were enrolled and received treatment, the median OS and PFS were 15.9 months and 5.1 months, the ORR was 36.7%. The most common grade 3 or 4 treatment-related adverse events were thrombocytopenia (33.3%), with no reported deaths nor unexpected safety events. Predefined biomarker analysis indicated that patients with homologous recombination repair pathway gene alterations or loss-of-function mutations in chromatin remodeling genes presented better tumor response and survival outcomes. Furthermore, transcriptome analysis revealed a markedly longer PFS and tumor response were associated with higher expression of a 3-gene effector T cell signature or an 18-gene inflamed T cell signature. Sintilimab plus gemcitabine and cisplatin meets pre-specified endpoints and displays acceptable safety profile, multiomics potential predictive biomarkers are identified and warrant further verification.
Keyphrases
- clinical trial
- phase ii
- genome wide
- free survival
- genome wide identification
- dna damage
- papillary thyroid
- copy number
- open label
- end stage renal disease
- locally advanced
- dna repair
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- poor prognosis
- transcription factor
- squamous cell carcinoma
- squamous cell
- newly diagnosed
- dna methylation
- radiation therapy
- immune response
- dendritic cells
- mass spectrometry
- randomized controlled trial
- genome wide analysis
- double blind
- young adults
- long non coding rna
- childhood cancer
- lymph node metastasis
- patient reported
- oxidative stress
- smoking cessation
- single molecule