Immune induction strategies to enhance responses to PD-1 blockade: lessons from the TONIC trial
- PMID: 31752991
- PMCID: PMC6868725
- DOI: 10.1186/s40425-019-0783-x
Immune induction strategies to enhance responses to PD-1 blockade: lessons from the TONIC trial
Abstract
Programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) blockade is only effective in a minority of patients, prompting the search for combinatorial therapies that increase responses. Identifying effective combinations requires lengthy testing and so far has shown few successes. To accelerate progress Voorwerk and colleagues (Nat Med. 25(6):920-8, 2019) used an adaptive trial design to compare 4 short-course therapies (radiotherapy, cyclophosphamide, cisplatin and doxorubicin) for their ability to improve the tumor immune microenvironment and enhance responses to subsequent PD-1 blockade in women with metastatic triple negative breast cancer, a disease with low response rate to PD-1 blockade. They reported the first phase of the trial that enrolled 12 to 17 patients per arm to "pick the winner" induction treatment. Higher objective response rates (ORR) compared to no induction were observed only in the arm containing doxorubicin, which proceeded to phase II. These results raise a number of questions about testing local versus systemic induction treatments and whether sequencing with PD-1 blockade is appropriate in light of evidence supporting concomitant treatment, at least for radiotherapy. Small imbalances in baseline characteristics can also influence results obtained with limited numbers of patients per arm. We hope that these considerations will help future adaptive, signal-finding combination immunotherapy studies.
Keywords: Immunogenic cell death, tumor burden; Immunomodulation; Tumor-infiltrating T cells.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare no competing financial interests related to this manuscript, but SCF has received advisory/ speaker compensation from Sanofi, Regeneron, Elekta, EMD Serono, Merck, Astra Zeneca, Bayer and research support from Varian, Bristol-Myer Squibb, Regeneron, Eisai, Merck and Janssen, SD has received compensation for consultant/advisory services from Lytix Biopharma, AstraZeneca, Mersana Therapeutics and EMD Serono, and research support form Lytix Biopharma and Nanobiotix, and ER has received research funding from Bristol-Myer Squibb.
Comment on
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Immune induction strategies in metastatic triple-negative breast cancer to enhance the sensitivity to PD-1 blockade: the TONIC trial.Nat Med. 2019 Jun;25(6):920-928. doi: 10.1038/s41591-019-0432-4. Epub 2019 May 13. Nat Med. 2019. PMID: 31086347 Clinical Trial.
References
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- Adams S, Loi S, Toppmeyer D, Cescon DW, De Laurentiis M, Nanda R, et al. Pembrolizumab monotherapy for previously untreated, PD-L1-positive, metastatic triple-negative breast cancer: cohort B of the phase II KEYNOTE-086 study. Ann Oncol. 2019;30(3):405–411. doi: 10.1093/annonc/mdy518. - DOI - PubMed
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