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A phase 1 study of nivolumab in combination with interferon-gamma for patients with advanced solid tumors.

Matthew R ZibelmanAlexander W MacFarlaneKimberly CostelloThomas McGowanJohn O'NeillRutika KokateHossein BorghaeiCrystal S DenlingerEfrat DotanDaniel M GeynismanAngela JainLainie MartinElias ObeidKarthik DevarajanKaren RuthR Katherine AlpaughEssel Al-Saleem DulaimiEdna CukiermanMargret EinarsonKerry S CampbellElizabeth R Plimack
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
This phase I, dose-escalation trial evaluates the safety of combining interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) and nivolumab in patients with metastatic solid tumors. Twenty-six patients are treated in four cohorts assessing increasing doses of IFN-γ with nivolumab to evaluate the primary endpoint of safety and determine the recommended phase two dose (RP2D). Most common adverse events are low grade and associated with IFN-γ. Three dose limiting toxicities are reported at the highest dose cohorts. We report only one patient with any immune related adverse event (irAE). No irAEs ≥ grade 3 are observed and no patients require corticosteroids. The maximum tolerated dose of IFN-γ is 75 mcg/m 2 , however based on a composite of safety, clinical, and correlative factors the RP2D is 50 mcg/m 2 . Exploratory analyses of efficacy in the phase I cohorts demonstrate one patient with a complete response, and five have achieved stable disease. Pre-planned correlative assessments of circulating immune cells demonstrate intermediate monocytes with increased PD-L1 expression correlating with IFN-γ dose and treatment duration. Interestingly, post-hoc analysis shows that IFN-γ induction increases circulating chemokines and is associated with an observed paucity of irAEs, warranting further evaluation. ClinicalTrials.gov Trial Registration: NCT02614456.
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