Abstract

BackgroundPatients with advanced endometrial cancer have a poor prognosis, and treatment options are limited. The investigator-initiated, multicenter, phase II DOMEC trial (NCT03951415) is the first trial to report data on efficacy and safety of combined treatment with PD-L1 and PARP inhibition for advanced endometrial cancer. Patients and methodsPatients with metastatic or recurrent endometrial cancer were enrolled. Patients received durvalumab 1500 mg intravenously q4w and olaparib 300 mg 2dd until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or patient withdrawal. Patients with at least 4 weeks of treatment were evaluable for analysis. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival at 6 months. Evidence for efficacy was defined as progression-free survival at 6 months in ≥50% of patients. Secondary endpoints included safety, objective response and overall survival. ResultsFrom July 2019, through November 2020, 55 patients were enrolled. At data cut-off (September 2021), 4 of the 50 evaluable patients were still on treatment. Seventeen patients (34%) were progression-free at 6 months. Objective response rate was 16% (95% CI, 8.3 to 28.5) with 1 complete and 7 partial responses. With a median follow-up of 17.6 months, median progression-free survival was 3.4 months (95% CI, 2.8 to 6.2) and median overall survival was 8.0 months (95% CI, 7.5 to 14.3). Grade 3 treatment-related adverse events occurred in 8 patients (16%), predominantly anemia. There were no grade 4 or 5 treatment-related adverse events. ConclusionThe combination of durvalumab and olaparib was well tolerated, but did not meet the prespecified 50% 6-month progression-free survival in this heterogeneous patient population with advanced endometrial cancer.

Highlights

  • Endometrial cancer is the most common gynecological cancer in developed countries

  • The significant prognostic and predictive differences among the four molecular subgroups in early-stage disease have been replicated in standard diagnostic pathology materials using surrogate markers, identifying similar subgroups: p53-abnormal, POLEultramutated, mismatch repair-deficient or microsatellite unstable (MMRd), and no specific molecular profile (NSMP) endometrial cancer [14–16]

  • MMRd advanced endometrial cancer, which is characterized by a high number of somatic mutations and increased immunogenicity, has been shown to potentially benefit from single-agent programmed cell death-ligand or protein 1 (PD-[L]1) inhibitors with reported objective tumor response rates varying between 27% and 57% [7–11]

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Summary

Background

Patients with advanced endometrial cancer have a poor prognosis, and treatment options are limited. The investigator-initiated, multicenter, phase II DOMEC trial (NCT03951415) is the first trial to report data on efficacy and safety of combined treatment with PD-L1 and PARP inhibition for advanced endometrial cancer

Patients and methods
Results
Introduction
Study design and patients
Procedures and outcomes
Statistical analysis
Patients
Efficacy
Safety
Discussion
Declaration of Competing Interest
Full Text
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