Abstract

In the last few years, immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) improved treatment strategies for advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with no targetable driver mutations. Empirical evidence strongly suggests that males and females differ in outcomes following the use of ICIs for treatments of solid cancers. Women in fact exhibit greater humoral and cell-mediated immune responses and an even more advanced immune editing which plays an important role in controlling cancer rising and evolution. However, at present, no conclusive studies have addressed differences in response to ICIs regarding sex and, to note, reproductive status in women or autoimmune diseases in both sexes are often not recorded in clinical trials. Consequently, it can be argued that to assess cancer responses and study cancer spread, results of published studies in men may not unconditionally be applied on female patients treated with ICIs, and vice versa. In this chapter have been discussed recent data about gender differences in the immune system and in NSCLC patients treated with ICIs, highlighting sex as a key factor in evaluating different responses in the two sexes.

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