[IoNESCO trial: Immune neoajuvant therapy in early stage non-small cell lung cancer].

Rev Mal Respir

Sorbonne Université, GRC n(o) 04, Theranoscan, 75252 Paris, France; Intergroupe francophone de cancérologie thoracique (IFCT), 10, rue de la Grange-Batelière, 75009 Paris, France; AP-HP, Groupe hospitalier HUEP, hôpital Tenon, ervice de pneumologie, 75970 Paris, France. Electronic address:

Published: November 2018

Background: Programmed cell death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) is a checkpoint receptor that facilitates immune evasion by tumor cells, through interaction with programmed cell death-1 (PD-1), a receptor expressed by T-cells. Durvalumab is an anti-PD-L1 monoclonal antibody that blocks PD-L1 interaction with PD-1 on T-cells, countering the tumor's immune-evading tactics. Phase I/II studies demonstrated durable responses and manageable tolerability in heavily pre-treated patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

Methods: This phase II study is designed to administrate three durvalumab IV infusions (10mg/kg at day 1, 15, 29) before surgery, to patients with pathologically confirmed NSCLC, clinical stage IB (>4cm) or stage II, ≥18 years of age, WHO performans status 0-1, without selection on PD-L1 expression. Preoperative chemotherapy and radiation therapy are not permitted. The primary objective is feasibility of complete surgical resection. Major pathological response on surgical tissue, defined as 10% or less remaining tumor cells, will be a secondary objective. Additional secondary objectives include tolerance, adverse effects, delay between start of treatment and surgery, response rate (RECIST 1.1), metabolic response rate, postoperative adverse events, disease-free survival and overall survival. A rate of complete resection<85% (P0) is considered unacceptable. P1 hypothesis is of 95%, and with a study power of 90% and an alpha risk of 5% (two-steps Fleming's procedure), 81 patients are required.

Expected Results: To establish whether neoadjuvant immunotherapy is feasible and could improve the survival of patients with early-stage NSCLC.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rmr.2018.08.006DOI Listing

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