Grade 3-4 events were reported in 55% of the combination group, 16.3% of the nivolumab-alone group, and 27.3% of the ipilimumab-alone group. The most common of these events were diarrhea in 2.2% of patients in the nivolumab group, 9.3% of the combination group and 6.1% of the ipilimumab group, colitis (0.6%, 7.7%, 8.7%) and increased alanine aminotransferase levels (1.3%, 8.3%, 1.6%).
“There is no signature adverse event for the combination,” Dr. Wolchok said. “With the use of immune-modulating agents, the majority of grade 3 and 4 select adverse events resolved in all of the groups with the use of established algorithms. However, as we observed in prior studies, most endocrine events did not.”
There was one treatment-related death due to neutropenia in the nivolumab group, one due to cardiac arrest in the ipilimumab group, and none in the combination group.
An expanded access program is available for the combination of nivolumab and ipilimumab through the study sponsor, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Dr. Wolchok noted.
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