Abstract

BackgroundWith a 5% improvement in 5-year overall survival achieved with current neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy, new treatments for resectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are urgently needed. The use of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) is established in metastatic NSCLC and is being evaluated in resectable NSCLC. MethodsPublications and conference databases and clinicaltrials.gov were searched for reports on clinical studies of neoadjuvant immunotherapy in patients with early resectable NSCLC. ResultsPotential advantages of neoadjuvant ICIs include the following: earlier treatment of micrometastatic disease; activation of a broader, potentially durable immune response by the whole tumor and associated lymph nodes; and pathologic assessment of neoadjuvant treatment response, which may guide adjuvant therapy. Surgical considerations include delays to surgery, potential disease progression preventing curative resection, and perioperative morbidity and mortality. Surrogate end points of efficacy (pathologic complete response, major pathologic response) and biomarkers predictive of outcome (programmed death ligand 1 expression, tumor mutational burden, and circulating tumor DNA) can accelerate clinical trial completion and early-stage treatment development; their application in neoadjuvant ICI studies in NSCLC is reviewed. ConclusionsPhase 2 trials of neoadjuvant ICIs alone or in combination with chemotherapy showed encouraging safety and efficacy in patients with resectable NSCLC, thus warranting the ongoing phase 3 studies of neoadjuvant immunotherapy combined with chemotherapy. Preoperative and intraoperative unresectability after neoadjuvant ICIs appears comparable to that observed with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. To help thoracic surgeons and medical oncologists to distinguish among ICIs beyond efficacy as phase 3 data emerge, surgery-related end points for perioperative morbidity, mortality, and complexity should be defined, standardized, incorporated into trial designs, and reported.

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