Publications by authors named "Mario Sznol"

Article Synopsis
  • Nivolumab (NIVO) combined with ipilimumab (IPI) shows better long-term overall survival (OS) in patients with unresectable/metastatic melanoma than NIVO alone, based on pooled data from major trials.
  • Patients treated with the combination therapy had a median follow-up OS of 45.0 months, with 6-year survival rates at 52%, compared to 41% for NIVO monotherapy after a median follow-up of 35.8 months.
  • Clinical factors affecting survival include elevated lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels, age over 65 with the combination therapy, and presence of liver metastases with NIVO alone.
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  • AccuScan is a new technology for whole genome sequencing (WGS) of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) that significantly reduces the error rate, making it more reliable for detecting molecular residual disease (MRD).
  • It achieves an impressive analytical sensitivity of detecting low levels of cancer variants with 100% specificity in colorectal and esophageal cancers shortly after surgery.
  • AccuScan also effectively monitors treatment response in melanoma patients by tracking circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), demonstrating its utility in predicting disease outcomes without needing large sample amounts.
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  • - Davoceticept (ALPN-202) is an experimental treatment designed to enhance immune response by targeting PD-L1 and CTLA-4, and its effectiveness was assessed in two studies: NEON-1 (monotherapy) and NEON-2 (in combination with pembrolizumab) on patients with advanced solid tumors.
  • - In NEON-1, 58 participants received varying doses of davoceticept, and in NEON-2, 29 patients received davoceticept alongside pembrolizumab, with safety and efficacy monitored through adverse events and tumor response.
  • - Results indicated that 67% of participants in NEON-1 and 62% in NEON-
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Despite remarkable advances in immunotherapy, melanoma remains a significant cause of cancer mortality. Many factors concerning melanoma mortality are poorly understood, posing an obstacle to optimal care. We conducted a retrospective observational cohort study of 183 patients with metastatic melanoma who died following immunotherapy treatment to investigate sites of metastases at death, settings of death, and mechanisms of death.

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The clinical research pipeline is critical to ensuring continued development of novel treatments that can offer patients with cancer safe and effective options. Unfortunately, progress has slowed since the COVID-19 pandemic due to uncovered, systemic inefficiencies across critical processes. Towards initiating discussion on how to reinvigorate clinical research, the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC) hosted a virtual summit that characterized issues and formed potential solutions.

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Background: Immunotherapy agents are approved for adjuvant treatment of stage III melanoma; however, evidence for survival benefit in early stage III disease is lacking. Current guidelines for adjuvant immunotherapy utilization in stage IIIA rely on clinician judgment, creating an opportunity for significant variation in prescribing patterns. This study aimed to characterize current immunotherapy practice variations and to compare patient outcomes for different prescribing practices in stage IIIA melanoma.

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Article Synopsis
  • AccuScan is a new whole genome sequencing (WGS) technology that significantly reduces error rates in analyzing cell-free DNA (cfDNA), achieving a much higher accuracy than previous methods.
  • This technology successfully detects molecular residual disease (MRD) with high sensitivity and specificity, particularly in cancers like colorectal and esophageal cancer, and also aids in monitoring responses to immunotherapy in melanoma patients.
  • Overall, AccuScan makes it easier and more efficient to detect circulating tumor DNA at very low levels without the need for extensive sample input or complex procedures.
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  • Current anti-cancer immunotherapies, while successful, only work for a small group of patients, highlighting the need for better biomarkers to predict treatment responses.
  • Researchers discovered that interferon-stimulated, Ly6E neutrophils can serve as a predictive biomarker for anti-PD1 therapy in mice, showing how they can enhance tumor response by activating T cells.
  • The study further confirmed that Ly6E neutrophils are an effective predictor of immunotherapy responses in humans with lung cancer and melanoma, achieving high accuracy in patient cohorts and public data analysis.
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  • Immunotherapy is increasingly used in terminal illnesses, but the rate of its initiation at the end of life (EOL) is unclear.
  • A study analyzed data from over 240,000 patients with advanced cancer (melanoma, NSCLC, kidney cancer) to understand characteristics and trends in EOL-initiated immunotherapy.
  • Findings show that EOL-I immunotherapy instances rose over time, with significant increases in treatments started within a month of death, particularly in patients with extensive metastatic involvement.
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Prospective and between trial comparisons indicate that first-line treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors improves survival outcomes compared to first-line therapy with combined BRAF and MEK inhibitors in metastatic melanoma containing BRAFV600E/K mutations. Long-term outcomes for BRAF/MEK inhibition after progression on immunotherapy have not been reported. Moreover, clinical variables associated with outcome from treatment with combined BRAF/MEK inhibition were previously identified in the first-line setting but have not been investigated when targeted therapies are administered after progression on immune therapy.

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Background: Stimulating inflammatory tumor associated macrophages can overcome resistance to PD-(L)1 blockade. We previously conducted a phase I trial of cabiralizumab (anti-CSF1R), sotigalimab (CD40-agonist) and nivolumab. Our current purpose was to study the activity and cellular effects of this three-drug regimen in anti-PD-1-resistant melanoma.

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Purpose: Despite marked advances in the treatment of unresectable or metastatic melanoma, the need for novel therapies remains. Bempegaldesleukin (BEMPEG), a pegylated interleukin-2 (IL-2) cytokine prodrug, demonstrated efficacy in the phase II PIVOT-02 trial. PIVOT IO 001 (ClinicalTrials.

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Purpose: Disease progression during or after anti-PD-1-based treatment is common in advanced melanoma. Sotigalimab is a CD40 agonist antibody with a unique epitope specificity and Fc receptor binding profile optimized for activation of CD40-expressing antigen-presenting cells. Preclinical data indicated that CD40 agonists combined with anti-PD1 could overcome resistance to anti-PD-1.

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Immune-related toxicities, otherwise known as immune-related adverse events (irAEs), occur in a substantial fraction of cancer patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). Ranging from asymptomatic to life-threatening, ICI-induced irAEs can result in hospital admission, high-dose corticosteroid treatment, ICI discontinuation, and in some cases, death. A deeper understanding of the factors underpinning severe irAE development will be essential for improved irAE prediction and prevention, toward maximizing the benefits and safety profiles of ICIs.

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Background: Despite improvements in the treatment of primary uveal melanoma (UM), patients with metastatic disease continue to exhibit poor survival.

Methods: A retrospective review of metastatic UM patients at Yale (initial cohort) and Memorial Sloan Kettering (validation cohort) was conducted. Cox proportional hazards regression was used to determine baseline factors that are associated with overall survival, including sex, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status Scale, laboratory measurements, metastasis location, and use of anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 therapies.

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Background: In preclinical studies, combining M9241 (a novel immunocytokine containing interleukin (IL)-12 heterodimers) with avelumab (anti-programmed death ligand 1 antibody) resulted in additive or synergistic antitumor effects. We report dose-escalation and dose-expansion results from the phase Ib JAVELIN IL-12 trial investigating M9241 plus avelumab.

Methods: In the dose-escalation part of JAVELIN IL-12 (NCT02994953), eligible patients had locally advanced or metastatic solid tumors; in the dose-expansion part, eligible patients had locally advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma (UC) that had progressed with first-line therapy.

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Purpose: IFN signaling in the tumor microenvironment is a critical determinant of both response and resistance of cancer to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI). We hypothesized that distinct patterns of IFN signaling in melanoma are associated with clinical response or resistance to ICIs.

Experimental Design: Two tissue microarrays containing samples from 97 patients with metastatic melanoma who received nivolumab, pembrolizumab, or a combination of ipilimumab and nivolumab at Yale New Haven Hospital between 2011 and 2017 were randomized into discovery and validation cohorts.

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Purpose: Programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) is an inhibitory receptor expressed by activated T cells that downmodulates effector functions and limits the generation of immune memory. PD-1 blockade can mediate tumor regression in a substantial proportion of patients with melanoma, but it is not known whether this is associated with extended survival or maintenance of response after treatment is discontinued.

Patients And Methods: Patients with advanced melanoma (N = 107) enrolled between 2008 and 2012 received intravenous nivolumab in an outpatient setting every 2 weeks for up to 96 weeks and were observed for overall survival, long-term safety, and response duration after treatment discontinuation.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to check if gene expression profile (GEP) testing is useful for predicting outcomes in uveal melanoma patients and whether combining tumor size with GEP classification adds value to prognosis.
  • Data from 337 patients with choroidal melanoma were analyzed to find the link between tumor characteristics and risk of metastasis.
  • Results showed that larger tumor size and GEP class 2 were associated with higher metastasis risk, with tumor thickness being a more reliable prognostic factor than GEP classification.
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Introduction: Combination immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) and vascular endothelial growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (VEGF-R-TKI), including pembrolizumab/axitinib, are approved for first-line treatment of metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC). Pembrolizumab/axitinib is associated with superior progression free survival (PFS), objective response rate (ORR), and overall survival over sunitinib. However, to date, the activity and safety of pembrolizumab/axitinib in later lines of therapy has not been reported.

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  • Researchers are exploring new treatments for advanced cancer patients who don't respond to current immune therapies, focusing on interleukin-2 for its potential to enhance immune response and reduce side effects.
  • Bempegaldesleukin, a modified IL-2, failed to improve outcomes in patients with metastatic melanoma and renal carcinoma when tested alongside an anti-PD-1 treatment.
  • Despite this setback, other interleukin-2 variants show promise and different characteristics that suggest they should continue to be developed and tested clinically.
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The broad activity of agents blocking the programmed cell death protein 1 and its ligand (the PD-(L)1 axis) revolutionized oncology, offering long-term benefit to patients and even curative responses for tumors that were once associated with dismal prognosis. However, only a minority of patients experience durable clinical benefit with immune checkpoint inhibitor monotherapy in most disease settings. Spurred by preclinical and correlative studies to understand mechanisms of non-response to the PD-(L)1 antagonists and by combination studies in animal tumor models, many drug development programs were designed to combine anti-PD-(L)1 with a variety of approved and investigational chemotherapies, tumor-targeted therapies, antiangiogenic therapies, and other immunotherapies.

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Background: Phase 1/2 dose-escalation and expansion study evaluating varlilumab, a fully human agonist anti-CD27 mAb, with nivolumab in anti-PD-1/L1 naïve, refractory solid tumors.

Methods: Phase 1 evaluated the safety of varlilumab (0.1-10 mg/kg) with nivolumab (3 mg/kg) administered once every 2 weeks.

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