Safety
“The safety profile was as expected for the components of the combination, and no new safety signals were observed,” Dr. Kline said.
He noted that AEs of special interest, or immune-related AEs, occurred in 61% of patients, but most of these events were grade 1 or 2.
AEs of special interest included diarrhea (28%), rash (23%), infusion-related reactions (16%), dermatitis (12%), hypothyroidism (5%), myocarditis (5%), adrenal insufficiency (2%), and hepatitis (2%).
Grade 3 or 4 AEs of special interest included infusion-related reactions (5%), rash (2%), diarrhea (2%), and hepatitis (2%).
The safety and efficacy results support further evaluation of durvalumab plus R-CHOP, although it will be important to identify DLBCL patients who are more likely to derive a clinical benefit from PD-1 or PD-L1 blockade, Dr. Kline said.
“This early study showed that the combination is feasible,” Dr. Nowakowski added. “I think, down the road, we’ll need to identify patients who can actually benefit from this combination. We definitely have clinical evidence of exceptional responses to PD-1 blockade.”
The trial was sponsored by Celgene. Dr. Nowakowski reported relationships with Celgene, Genentech, MorphoSys, and NanoString Technologies. Dr. Kline reported relationships with Cardinal Health, Merck, Seattle Genetics, Kite/Gilead, ITeos Therapeutics, and Bristol-Myers Squibb.
SOURCE: Nowakowski GS et al. ASCO 2019, Abstract 7520.