Efficacy Of Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors (Icis) In Rare Histological Variants Of Bladder Cancer

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY(2020)

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摘要
502 Background: ICIs are effective agents in metastatic urothelial carcinoma in both platinum-refractory and frontline settings. Responses in patients (pts) with non-urothelial histological variants are not well defined. Methods: We undertook a retrospective analysis of pts with metastatic bladder cancer treated with ICI monotherapy. Pts were identified as having a variant histology if any non-urothelial component was present. Fisher’s exact test was used to assess differences in ORR by histology. Results: Between 12/2014 and 10/2019, 102 pts received ICI monotherapy, of whom 93 were evaluable for response and 33 had variant histology. Median age was 70 yrs, 66% were male, 50% received prior platinum-based chemotherapy. Most received pembrolizumab (66%) or atezolizumab (33%). ORR in the overall cohort was 26% (15% PR, 11% CR), with 12% having SD. Histology breakdown and responses are shown in Table. Although twice as many responses were seen in urothelial pts as in pts with variant histologies (ORR 31% vs 15%), this difference was non-significant (p = 0.14). Conclusions: In this large single-institution cohort, ORR in a heterogeneous population of bladder cancer pts was consistent with data previously reported in clinical trials. Pts with variant histologies had numerically lower responses relative to pure urothelial histology, but this difference was not statistically significant. Clinical benefit to ICIs was seen across multiple variant histologies suggesting potential efficacy in this patient population that should be confirmed prospectively.[Table: see text]
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