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The combination of nivolumab (Opdivo, Bristol Myers Squibb) and rucaparib (Rubraca, Clovis Oncology) demonstrated noteworthy activity among patients with metastatic prostate cancer harboring BRCA mutations, according to new research presented Sept. 18 (abstract 579MO) at the European Society for Medical Oncology Congress 2021.

The findings were specific to patients not yet been treated with chemotherapy and whose tumors were positive for homologous recombination deficiency (HRD). However, for patients whose tumors were negative for HRD, the clinical activity was limited, said Daniel P. Petrylak, MD, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and lead investigator for the study called CheckMate 9KD (NCT03338790) .

The patients who were included in all CheckMate 9KD cohorts had no prior treatment with targeted T-cell co-stimulation or immune checkpoint pathways. They had metastatic castrate resistant prostate cancer with documented disease progression, ECOG performance status of 0-1, and tissue available for HRD testing.


Dr. Petrylak offered an updated analysis of cohort A2 with 71 patients (median age 73 years), all of whom had received 1-2 prior new hormonal therapies in the pre-chemotherapy setting. Patients who had received prior PARP inhibitors were ineligible, as were those who refused chemotherapy treatment.
 

ORR/PSA RR primary endpoints

Patients received nivolumab and rucaparib, nivolumab at 480 mg (q4 weeks up to 2 years) and rucaparib at 600 mg b.i.d., until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. Objective response rate and PSA response rate (PSA-RR) were the primary endpoint, with overall survival as a secondary endpoint, along with time to objective response, duration of objective response, time to PSA progression, safety, and radiographic progression-free survival.

Median follow-up was 17.5 months with median treatment duration of 4.6 months in the nivolumab group and 5.5 months for rucaparib. At the time of the final database lock in March 2021, 65 patients (91.5%) had discontinued treatment, most often for disease progression (n = 43; 60.6%) or study drug toxicity (n = 8; 11.3%). Four patients (5.6%) remained on treatment.
 

Better responses for HRD and BRCA 1/2 positive

Stratifying response outcomes showed higher rates for patients who were HRD positive and BRCA1/2 positive for confirmed objective response rate (HRD+ 25.0%, BRCA 1/2+ 33.3%, HRD-/not evaluable 5.3%, all patients 15.4%) and for PSA response (HRD+ 41.9%, BRCA 1/2+ 84.6%, HRD-/not evaluable 14.3%, all patients 27.3%). Partial response rates were 33.3% for BRCA 1/2, 25.0% for HRD positive, 5.3% for HRD- and 15.4% for all patients. Radiographic progression-free survival was longer in the HRD positive group at a median of 10.9 months (95% CI 6.7-12.0), compared with 5.6 months (3.7-9.1) in the HRD-/not evaluable group. Overall survival was similar in the HRD negative group/not evaluable group at 19.0 months (8.2-22.1) and the HRD positive group at 22.7 months (14.1-NE).

 

 

Safety profile as expected

Treatment-related adverse events were reported for most patients (64/71, 90.1%), with grade 3-4 events in about half (50.7%). The most common event was grade 1-2 nausea (40.8%), with anemia at 32.4% and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) increases and fatigue both at 28.2%. Adverse events led to discontinuation in 23.9% of patients, with anemia and increased ALT leading both at 4.2%. Grade 3-4 adverse events led to discontinuation in 15.5% of patients. Investigators reported no treatment-related deaths. “The safety profile of nivolumab plus rucaparib was as expected based on the individual components with no new safety signals,” Dr. Petrylak said.

Longer follow-up is needed, Dr. Petrylak added, to better characterize the clinical benefits of adding nivolumab to rucaparib for this population.

Discussion moderator Guilia Baciarello, MD, Milan, asked how much nivolumab added to the rucaparib benefit. Dr. Petrylak responded, “We really can’t determine how much it’s adding because the single-agent data, particularly with the checkpoints, is generally very low. I can’t recall any published data with nivolumab as a single agent, but for example with pembrolizumab or atezolizumab in unselected patients it’s 5%-10%. So, we really can’t tell how much nivolumab added in the BRCA positive patients.”

Dr. Baciarello asked, “Will there be a nivolumab versus rucaparib trial in HRD positive patients?”

“I think that’s something that needs to be considered. I think we may also want to consider doing a broader phase II in that group of patients to really nail down the signal. That’s under discussion,” Dr. Petrylak said.

The study was funded by Bristol Myers Squibb. Dr. Petrylak disclosed numerous financial interests including personal and consulting fees.

This article was updated Sept. 24, 2021.

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The combination of nivolumab (Opdivo, Bristol Myers Squibb) and rucaparib (Rubraca, Clovis Oncology) demonstrated noteworthy activity among patients with metastatic prostate cancer harboring BRCA mutations, according to new research presented Sept. 18 (abstract 579MO) at the European Society for Medical Oncology Congress 2021.

The findings were specific to patients not yet been treated with chemotherapy and whose tumors were positive for homologous recombination deficiency (HRD). However, for patients whose tumors were negative for HRD, the clinical activity was limited, said Daniel P. Petrylak, MD, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and lead investigator for the study called CheckMate 9KD (NCT03338790) .

The patients who were included in all CheckMate 9KD cohorts had no prior treatment with targeted T-cell co-stimulation or immune checkpoint pathways. They had metastatic castrate resistant prostate cancer with documented disease progression, ECOG performance status of 0-1, and tissue available for HRD testing.


Dr. Petrylak offered an updated analysis of cohort A2 with 71 patients (median age 73 years), all of whom had received 1-2 prior new hormonal therapies in the pre-chemotherapy setting. Patients who had received prior PARP inhibitors were ineligible, as were those who refused chemotherapy treatment.
 

ORR/PSA RR primary endpoints

Patients received nivolumab and rucaparib, nivolumab at 480 mg (q4 weeks up to 2 years) and rucaparib at 600 mg b.i.d., until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. Objective response rate and PSA response rate (PSA-RR) were the primary endpoint, with overall survival as a secondary endpoint, along with time to objective response, duration of objective response, time to PSA progression, safety, and radiographic progression-free survival.

Median follow-up was 17.5 months with median treatment duration of 4.6 months in the nivolumab group and 5.5 months for rucaparib. At the time of the final database lock in March 2021, 65 patients (91.5%) had discontinued treatment, most often for disease progression (n = 43; 60.6%) or study drug toxicity (n = 8; 11.3%). Four patients (5.6%) remained on treatment.
 

Better responses for HRD and BRCA 1/2 positive

Stratifying response outcomes showed higher rates for patients who were HRD positive and BRCA1/2 positive for confirmed objective response rate (HRD+ 25.0%, BRCA 1/2+ 33.3%, HRD-/not evaluable 5.3%, all patients 15.4%) and for PSA response (HRD+ 41.9%, BRCA 1/2+ 84.6%, HRD-/not evaluable 14.3%, all patients 27.3%). Partial response rates were 33.3% for BRCA 1/2, 25.0% for HRD positive, 5.3% for HRD- and 15.4% for all patients. Radiographic progression-free survival was longer in the HRD positive group at a median of 10.9 months (95% CI 6.7-12.0), compared with 5.6 months (3.7-9.1) in the HRD-/not evaluable group. Overall survival was similar in the HRD negative group/not evaluable group at 19.0 months (8.2-22.1) and the HRD positive group at 22.7 months (14.1-NE).

 

 

Safety profile as expected

Treatment-related adverse events were reported for most patients (64/71, 90.1%), with grade 3-4 events in about half (50.7%). The most common event was grade 1-2 nausea (40.8%), with anemia at 32.4% and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) increases and fatigue both at 28.2%. Adverse events led to discontinuation in 23.9% of patients, with anemia and increased ALT leading both at 4.2%. Grade 3-4 adverse events led to discontinuation in 15.5% of patients. Investigators reported no treatment-related deaths. “The safety profile of nivolumab plus rucaparib was as expected based on the individual components with no new safety signals,” Dr. Petrylak said.

Longer follow-up is needed, Dr. Petrylak added, to better characterize the clinical benefits of adding nivolumab to rucaparib for this population.

Discussion moderator Guilia Baciarello, MD, Milan, asked how much nivolumab added to the rucaparib benefit. Dr. Petrylak responded, “We really can’t determine how much it’s adding because the single-agent data, particularly with the checkpoints, is generally very low. I can’t recall any published data with nivolumab as a single agent, but for example with pembrolizumab or atezolizumab in unselected patients it’s 5%-10%. So, we really can’t tell how much nivolumab added in the BRCA positive patients.”

Dr. Baciarello asked, “Will there be a nivolumab versus rucaparib trial in HRD positive patients?”

“I think that’s something that needs to be considered. I think we may also want to consider doing a broader phase II in that group of patients to really nail down the signal. That’s under discussion,” Dr. Petrylak said.

The study was funded by Bristol Myers Squibb. Dr. Petrylak disclosed numerous financial interests including personal and consulting fees.

This article was updated Sept. 24, 2021.

The combination of nivolumab (Opdivo, Bristol Myers Squibb) and rucaparib (Rubraca, Clovis Oncology) demonstrated noteworthy activity among patients with metastatic prostate cancer harboring BRCA mutations, according to new research presented Sept. 18 (abstract 579MO) at the European Society for Medical Oncology Congress 2021.

The findings were specific to patients not yet been treated with chemotherapy and whose tumors were positive for homologous recombination deficiency (HRD). However, for patients whose tumors were negative for HRD, the clinical activity was limited, said Daniel P. Petrylak, MD, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and lead investigator for the study called CheckMate 9KD (NCT03338790) .

The patients who were included in all CheckMate 9KD cohorts had no prior treatment with targeted T-cell co-stimulation or immune checkpoint pathways. They had metastatic castrate resistant prostate cancer with documented disease progression, ECOG performance status of 0-1, and tissue available for HRD testing.


Dr. Petrylak offered an updated analysis of cohort A2 with 71 patients (median age 73 years), all of whom had received 1-2 prior new hormonal therapies in the pre-chemotherapy setting. Patients who had received prior PARP inhibitors were ineligible, as were those who refused chemotherapy treatment.
 

ORR/PSA RR primary endpoints

Patients received nivolumab and rucaparib, nivolumab at 480 mg (q4 weeks up to 2 years) and rucaparib at 600 mg b.i.d., until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. Objective response rate and PSA response rate (PSA-RR) were the primary endpoint, with overall survival as a secondary endpoint, along with time to objective response, duration of objective response, time to PSA progression, safety, and radiographic progression-free survival.

Median follow-up was 17.5 months with median treatment duration of 4.6 months in the nivolumab group and 5.5 months for rucaparib. At the time of the final database lock in March 2021, 65 patients (91.5%) had discontinued treatment, most often for disease progression (n = 43; 60.6%) or study drug toxicity (n = 8; 11.3%). Four patients (5.6%) remained on treatment.
 

Better responses for HRD and BRCA 1/2 positive

Stratifying response outcomes showed higher rates for patients who were HRD positive and BRCA1/2 positive for confirmed objective response rate (HRD+ 25.0%, BRCA 1/2+ 33.3%, HRD-/not evaluable 5.3%, all patients 15.4%) and for PSA response (HRD+ 41.9%, BRCA 1/2+ 84.6%, HRD-/not evaluable 14.3%, all patients 27.3%). Partial response rates were 33.3% for BRCA 1/2, 25.0% for HRD positive, 5.3% for HRD- and 15.4% for all patients. Radiographic progression-free survival was longer in the HRD positive group at a median of 10.9 months (95% CI 6.7-12.0), compared with 5.6 months (3.7-9.1) in the HRD-/not evaluable group. Overall survival was similar in the HRD negative group/not evaluable group at 19.0 months (8.2-22.1) and the HRD positive group at 22.7 months (14.1-NE).

 

 

Safety profile as expected

Treatment-related adverse events were reported for most patients (64/71, 90.1%), with grade 3-4 events in about half (50.7%). The most common event was grade 1-2 nausea (40.8%), with anemia at 32.4% and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) increases and fatigue both at 28.2%. Adverse events led to discontinuation in 23.9% of patients, with anemia and increased ALT leading both at 4.2%. Grade 3-4 adverse events led to discontinuation in 15.5% of patients. Investigators reported no treatment-related deaths. “The safety profile of nivolumab plus rucaparib was as expected based on the individual components with no new safety signals,” Dr. Petrylak said.

Longer follow-up is needed, Dr. Petrylak added, to better characterize the clinical benefits of adding nivolumab to rucaparib for this population.

Discussion moderator Guilia Baciarello, MD, Milan, asked how much nivolumab added to the rucaparib benefit. Dr. Petrylak responded, “We really can’t determine how much it’s adding because the single-agent data, particularly with the checkpoints, is generally very low. I can’t recall any published data with nivolumab as a single agent, but for example with pembrolizumab or atezolizumab in unselected patients it’s 5%-10%. So, we really can’t tell how much nivolumab added in the BRCA positive patients.”

Dr. Baciarello asked, “Will there be a nivolumab versus rucaparib trial in HRD positive patients?”

“I think that’s something that needs to be considered. I think we may also want to consider doing a broader phase II in that group of patients to really nail down the signal. That’s under discussion,” Dr. Petrylak said.

The study was funded by Bristol Myers Squibb. Dr. Petrylak disclosed numerous financial interests including personal and consulting fees.

This article was updated Sept. 24, 2021.

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