
Expert Discusses Integration of PD-1 Inhibitors Into Clinical Practice
To gain insight on the integration of these agents and other immunotherapies into clinical practice, OncLive interviewed Jeffery S. Weber, MD, PhD, a senior member at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Florida.
Jeffery S. Weber, MD, PhD
What is the clinical impact of the approval of nivolumab?
What is next for immunotherapies, as a whole, in melanoma?
What is the role for chemotherapy in the treatment of melanoma?
What is the role of pembrolizumab and nivolumab in the adjuvant setting or even the neoadjuvant setting?
In the past 4 months, the PD-1 inhibitors
Could pembrolizumab and nivolumab make a borderline unresectable lesion into a resectable lesion?
In the absence of a biomarker, what criteria should be used to determine which patients should receive these agents?
There will be trials coming up, though, and I suspect they will fill up very quickly because there currently are no large trials in stage III and IV resected melanoma.Yes, I think there is a serious promise there. You want a neoadjuvant therapy to have about a 50% response rate and nivolumab has about a 40% response rate in the frontline. I could see nivolumab in combination with ipilimumab being a potentially promising neoadjuvant regimen and eliciting a 40%-plus response rate. That would put patients in the range where it could be used clinically and could cause enough tumor regression to try resection. I think there is potential there.Pretty much anybody can tolerate nivolumab and ipilimumab. The combination is more toxic, so that’s a little different.
A common thought is that patients with indolent, low-burden disease, low bulk with normal LDH—whether they are BRAF-mutated or not—should go on immunotherapy to take advantage of the tail on the curve. If they are BRAF-mutated and have high LDH, bulky or aggressive disease, they should go on a combination of a BRAF and MEK inhibitor. To some degree, I think a lot of doctors follow that philosophy. It has never been subjected to a proper randomized trial, but it will.
I think there will be an ECOG trial looking at the BRAF-mutated population and randomizing the sequence of immunotherapy and targeted therapy. That will help to answer the question of who should be treated first with immunotherapy.
I think a lot of docs in the community are still using a BRAF inhibitor plus a MEK inhibitor, even in the indolent, low-burden population because it is so easy to administer the drugs. An oncologist can write a quick prescription and 3 days later, it gets delivered to the patient’s house. Then, an oncologist sees their patient once a month, gets them an EKG, and sends them to the dermatologist. It’s not a lot of work. If they prescribe nivolumab or pembrolizumab, the patient is coming back every 2 or 3 weeks, respectively, to go to the infusion center. Until we see the data from that ECOG trial, we won’t know what the best initial treatment is in the BRAF-mutated population.



































