Development of a Prognostic Biomarker Score for Nivolumab in Relapsed/Refractory Disease

2021 Year in Review - Renal-Cell Carcinoma —January 20, 2022

Nivolumab is an immune checkpoint inhibitor and is a standard-of-care treatment option for patients with advanced renal-cell carcinoma (RCC) who have disease progression on a first-line tyrosine kinase inhibitor. However, some patients do not experience long-term benefit with immunotherapy, and experts have suggested that the identification of biomarkers could determine which patients will benefit most from these therapies.1

In this multicenter retrospective study, clinical data and laboratory parameters from patients with advanced RCC receiving nivolumab were collected to develop a clinical prognostic score. Statistical methods were used to determine cutoffs for several inflammatory indices from baseline blood samples obtained before nivolumab initiation. Inflammatory measures included neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR), derived NLR, lymphocyte-to-monocyte ratio, platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio, systemic immune-inflammation index, and systemic inflammation response index. Overall survival (OS) from the time of nivolumab initiation was the primary end point. Progression-free survival, overall response rate, disease control rate, and duration of response were secondary end points.1

The study included 571 patients with RCC, of whom 70% were male with a median age of 61 years. Most patients had clear-cell histology (84%) and had received a previous nephrectomy (88%). After a median follow-up of 16.3 months, the median OS was 29.5 months, and the median progression-free survival was 7.3 months. Overall response rate was 31%, and disease control rate was 62%, with a median duration of response of 29.9 months.1

All the inflammatory indices were significantly associated with OS. Worse OS was predicted by higher NLR, derived NLR, platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio, systemic immune-inflammation index, and systemic inflammation response index (P <.001), whereas longer OS was predicted by higher lymphocyte-to-monocyte ratio (P = .009). For the clinical parameters, only poor- and intermediate-risk International Metastatic RCC Database Consortium prognostic score (P <.001) and the presence of bone metastases (P = .002) significantly affected OS.1

The Meet-URO prognostic score was developed and internally validated using the most strongly predictive values: NLR ≥3.2 (2 points), International Metastatic RCC Database Consortium prognostic score (intermediate risk, 3 points; poor risk, 6 points), and the presence of bone metastases (1 point). Median OS was 3.2 months for those with 9 points, 10.3 months for those with 6 to 8 points, 22.4 months for those with 4 or 5 points, 43.9 months for those with 2 or 3 points, and not reached for those with 0 or 1 point.1

The researchers concluded that the Meet-URO score can accurately stratify patients with metastatic RCC who are candidates for nivolumab therapy, providing “an easily and widely-applicable tool for clinical practice at no additional costs.”1 The Meet-URO score is available in an online calculator tool at https://proviso.shinyapps.io/Meet-URO15_score/.

Reference

  1. Rebuzzi SE, Signori A, Banna GL, et al. Inflammatory indices and clinical factors in metastatic renal cell carcinoma patients treated with nivolumab: the development of a novel prognostic score (Meet-URO 15 study). Ther Adv Med Oncol. 2021;13:17588359211019642. Erratum in: Ther Adv Med Oncol. 2021;13:17588359211036552.
Related Articles
Minimal Activity with Sapanisertib in Refractory Renal-Cell Carcinoma
2021 Year in Review - Renal-Cell Carcinoma
In a phase 2 study, sapanisertib did not improve outcomes in renal-cell carcinoma.
Active Therapy Improves Survival versus BSC After Disease Progression on Nivolumab and Cabozantinib
2021 Year in Review - Renal-Cell Carcinoma
In a retrospective study, active therapy conferred a survival benefit versus BSC for patients who have disease progression on both nivolumab and cabozantinib.
Real-World Treatment Patterns Have Drastically Changed Over the Past 5 Years
2021 Year in Review - Renal-Cell Carcinoma
Since the approval of dual immune checkpoint inhibition, real-world treatment patterns have evolved.
Last modified: August 10, 2023

Subscribe Today!

To sign up for our print publication or e-newsletter, please enter your contact information below.

I'd like to receive:

  • First Name *
    Last Name *
     
     
    Profession or Role
    Primary Specialty or Disease State
    Country