FDA/CDC

FDA approves new immunotherapy combo for liver cancer


 

The Food and Drug Administration has approved a new immunotherapy combination for use in the treatment of unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the most common type of liver cancer.

The new combination comprises a single dose of tremelimumab (Imjudo, AstraZeneca) followed by treatment with durvalumab (Imfinzi, AstraZeneca) in what is known as the STRIDE (single-tremelimumab regular-interval durvalumab) regimen.

This marks the first worldwide approval for tremelimumab, which is a CTLA-4 antibody.

The other drug in the combination, durvalumab, is an anti-PDL1 antibody and is already approved by the FDA for use in several tumor types, including lung cancer, bladder cancer, and biliary tract cancers.

The STRIDE regimen is composed of a single 300-mg dose of tremelimumab followed by durvalumab 1,500 mg given every 4 weeks.

This regimen was used in the HIMALAYA phase 3 trial, which was published in June 2022 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Results from this trial showed that 30% of patients treated with that combination were still alive at 3 years, compared with 20% of patients who were treated with the standard regimen, sorafenib.

“In addition to this regimen demonstrating a favorable 3-year survival rate in the HIMALAYA trial, safety data showed no increase in severe liver toxicity or bleeding risk for the combination, important factors for patients with liver cancer who also have advanced liver disease,” commented the principal investigator of this trial, Ghassan Abou-Alfa, MD, MBA, attending physician at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York.

“Patients with unresectable liver cancer are in need of well-tolerated treatments that can meaningfully extend overall survival,” he commented in a press release from the drug’s manufacturer, AstraZeneca.

When the results from this trial were presented earlier this year at the ASCO Gastrointestinal Cancers meeting, the discussant for that abstract, Anthony B. El-Khoueiry, MD, from the University of Southern California, Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, Los Angeles, suggested that the STRIDE regimen offers a new first-line treatment option for patients with advanced HCC.

He also made several comments about the design of the HIMALAYA trial, which has a third treatment arm in which patients received durvalumab alone. Dr. El-Khoueiry noted that single-agent durvalumab was noninferior to sorafenib, but he added that no conclusions could be drawn about the STRIDE regimen in comparison with durvalumab as a single agent, because the trial was not powered for that.

The STRIDE regimen showed a lower risk of bleeding in comparison with combinations that include VEGF inhibitors (such as bevacizumab), he said, but he also pointed out that this trial excluded patients with main portal vein thrombosis, who are at high risk of bleeding.

Details of adverse events

In the NEJM article, the trialists report that grade 3/4 treatment-emergent adverse events occurred in 50.5% of patients with STRIDE, 37.1% with durvalumab alone, and 52.4% of patients with sorafenib.

The manufacturer noted that severe and fatal immune-mediated adverse reactions may occur, including immune-mediated pneumonitis, colitis, hepatitis, endocrinopathies, dermatologic reactions, and others.

The company also noted that among the patients with unresectable HCC in the HIMALAYA study who received the STRIDE regimen, the most common adverse reactions (occurring in ≥ 20% of patients) were rash, diarrhea, fatigue, pruritus, musculoskeletal pain, and abdominal pain.

Serious adverse reactions occurred in 41% of patients and included hemorrhage (6%), diarrhea (4%), sepsis (2.1%), pneumonia (2.1%), rash (1.5%), vomiting (1.3%), acute kidney injury (1.3%), and anemia (1.3%).

Fatal adverse reactions occurred in 8% of patients who received the combination, including death (1%), intracranial hemorrhage (0.5%), cardiac arrest (0.5%), pneumonitis (0.5%), hepatic failure (0.5%), and immune-mediated hepatitis (0.5%).

Permanent discontinuation of the treatment regimen because of an adverse reaction occurred in 14% of patients.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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