Abstract

Background: Immunotherapy has shown great success in various malignancies. However, its efficacy in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains a challenge, and the lack of understanding about the appropriate timing of immunotherapy with other standard-of-care cancer treatments may be one of the causes. The objective of the current study is to investigate the impact of the timing of immunotherapy with chemotherapy and radiation therapy (RT) on the overall survival (OS) of PDAC patients who did not receive surgical resection of the pancreatic tumor.Materials and Methods: Patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma who did not receive surgical resection of the pancreatic tumor were identified from the National Cancer Database (NCDB). Cox proportional hazard models were employed to compare the OS between patients who received immunotherapy with chemotherapy or RT with a different sequence of treatment. The multivariable analysis was adjusted for age of diagnosis, race, sex, place of living, income, education, treatment facility type, insurance status, and year of diagnosis.Results: In total, 705 patients received chemotherapy and immunotherapy, while 226 received radiation therapy and immunotherapy. In the multivariable analysis, there was no significant difference in the OS of patients who started immunotherapy 31–90 days before the start of chemotherapy with a hazard ratio (HR) of [HR:1.057 (CI: 0.716–1.56; p < 0.781)] and patients who started immunotherapy 91–180 days before the start of chemotherapy [HR: 0.900 (CI: 0.584–1.388; p < 0.635)] compared to patients who started chemotherapy and immunotherapy within 30 days of each other. There was also no significant difference in the OS of patients who started RT> 30 days before the start of immunotherapy [HR: 0.636 (CI: 0.346–1.171; p < 0.146)] and patients who started immunotherapy > 30 days before the start of RT [HR: 0.660 (CI: 0.328–1.329; p < 0.246)] compared to patients who started RT and immunotherapy within 30 days of each other.Conclusion: The sequence of immunotherapy with chemotherapy or RT was not associated with improved OS. Future studies with a larger subgroup sample size investigating the impact of the timing of immunotherapy with chemotherapy and RT on the OS of PDAC patients who do not receive surgical resection of the pancreatic tumor are needed.

Highlights

  • Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) represents 3.2% of all cancer cases, but it is responsible for 7.2% of all cancer deaths in the United States [1]

  • The objective of this study is to investigate the impact of the sequence of immunotherapy with chemotherapy, and chemoradiation on the overall survival (OS) of PDAC patients using the National Cancer Database (NCDB) in an attempt to determine the appropriate treatment sequence that could be used to mitigate the immunosuppressive effects of the current treatments and maximize the impact of immunotherapy

  • In the multivariable Cox Proportional analysis (Table 3) adjusted for the age at diagnosis, sex, race, education, income, hospital type, comorbidity score, and year of diagnosis, there was no significant difference in the OS of patients who started immunotherapy 31–90 days before the start of chemotherapy [HR:1.057 (CI: 0.716–1.56; p < 0.781)] compared to patients who started chemotherapy and immunotherapy within 30 days of each other

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Summary

Introduction

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) represents 3.2% of all cancer cases, but it is responsible for 7.2% of all cancer deaths in the United States [1]. Median survival time of up to 54 months has been reported with adjuvant modified FOLFIRINOX in resected pancreatic cancer patients [7, 8]. Capecitabine-based chemoradiation therapy was associated with a median OS of 15.2 months in patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer patients [8]. Its efficacy in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains a challenge, and the lack of understanding about the appropriate timing of immunotherapy with other standard-of-care cancer treatments may be one of the causes. The objective of the current study is to investigate the impact of the timing of immunotherapy with chemotherapy and radiation therapy (RT) on the overall survival (OS) of PDAC patients who did not receive surgical resection of the pancreatic tumor

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