Tracking the tail.
Alex FriedlaenderStephen V LiuAlfredo AddeoPublished in: Journal for immunotherapy of cancer (2021)
Immune-checkpoint inhibitors have deeply changed the therapeutic landscape of advanced non-small cell lung cancer without actionable genomic alterations. Immune-checkpoint inhibitors have become standard front-line therapy, especially among patients with tumours expressing high levels of programmed death ligand-1; yet, many patients do not respond to therapy. This has led to the adoption of front-line combination therapies, administering programmed death-1 inhibitors concomitantly either with other checkpoint inhibitors, chemotherapy or both. Today's approved standard of care includes options with chemoimmunotherapy or dual checkpoint blockade, but each combination has only been compared to chemotherapy alone and no head-to-head trials exist. In cross-trial comparisons, combinations trials appear to show numerically superior responses to single-agent checkpoint inhibitors but the question is whether they ultimately offer a survival advantage. In this manuscript, we summarize and analyse all currently available front-line immune-checkpoint inhibitor trials in non-small cell lung cancer, whether as monotherapy or in combination with chemotherapy, second immunotherapy agents or both. Should standards of care change given the current data? While we ponder this question, we illustrate current data and conclude that the answer lies in tracking the tail of the survival curves.
Keyphrases
- advanced non small cell lung cancer
- dna damage
- electronic health record
- cell cycle
- locally advanced
- healthcare
- end stage renal disease
- palliative care
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- quality improvement
- optic nerve
- free survival
- study protocol
- gene expression
- squamous cell carcinoma
- chemotherapy induced
- affordable care act
- rectal cancer
- copy number
- cell proliferation
- phase ii
- patient reported outcomes
- open label
- radiation therapy
- health insurance
- randomized controlled trial
- machine learning
- dna methylation
- data analysis
- phase iii
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells
- artificial intelligence
- genome wide
- chronic pain
- double blind
- replacement therapy