Background: The PACIFIC trial established chemoradiation followed by 1-year durvalumab consolidation as standard of care for unresectable locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC). This study aims to investigate therapeutic strategies and clinical outcomes after durvalumab failure in the real-world. Materials and methods: Patients with stage III LA-NSCLC from 23 Italian centres were retrospectively enrolled at durvalumab progression. Subsequent treatments (Sub-Tx) were prospectively collected and classified as follows: chemo-immunotherapy (subgroup-1), platinum-based chemotherapy (subgroup-2), non-platinum-based chemotherapy (subgroup-3), and targeted therapy (subgroup-4). Durvalumab progression free survival (Dur-PFS) and overall survival (Dur-OS), as well as outcomes of Sub-Tx (Sub-PFS and Sub-OS) were estimated by using the Kaplan-Meier approach. Results: A total of 122 patients were enrolled. Median Dur-PFS was 9.3 months (95 % CI: 7.1 – 11.4) and median Dur-OS 24.2 months (95 % CI: 18.7 – 29.7). Out of 93 patients receiving a Sub-Tx, 21.5 %, 43.0 %, 28.0 %, and 7.5 % were in the subgroup 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively. Median Sub-PFS were 12.0, 4.1, 2.7, and 6.0 months, respectively. Patients who completed 12 months of durvalumab were 65.0 %, 27.5 %, 19.2 %, and 42.9 % across the four subgroups. In univariate analysis, the duration of durvalumab therapy was an independent factor for selecting Sub-Tx (p < 0.007). Median time to next treatment (TTNT) was 6.7 months with chemo-immunotherapy and 2.1 with chemotherapy (p = 0.009). Out of 15 patients with a TTNT > 1 year, 40 % were rechallenged with immunotherapy. Conclusion: Platinum-based chemotherapy was the predominant treatment after durvalumab consolidation. Immunotherapy rechallenge was associated with the best survival outcome in selected cases, warranting further investigation.
Real-world outcomes of subsequent treatment strategies after durvalumab consolidation in stage III unresectable non-small cell lung cancer
Russo, Alessandro;Pasello, Giulia;
2025
Abstract
Background: The PACIFIC trial established chemoradiation followed by 1-year durvalumab consolidation as standard of care for unresectable locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC). This study aims to investigate therapeutic strategies and clinical outcomes after durvalumab failure in the real-world. Materials and methods: Patients with stage III LA-NSCLC from 23 Italian centres were retrospectively enrolled at durvalumab progression. Subsequent treatments (Sub-Tx) were prospectively collected and classified as follows: chemo-immunotherapy (subgroup-1), platinum-based chemotherapy (subgroup-2), non-platinum-based chemotherapy (subgroup-3), and targeted therapy (subgroup-4). Durvalumab progression free survival (Dur-PFS) and overall survival (Dur-OS), as well as outcomes of Sub-Tx (Sub-PFS and Sub-OS) were estimated by using the Kaplan-Meier approach. Results: A total of 122 patients were enrolled. Median Dur-PFS was 9.3 months (95 % CI: 7.1 – 11.4) and median Dur-OS 24.2 months (95 % CI: 18.7 – 29.7). Out of 93 patients receiving a Sub-Tx, 21.5 %, 43.0 %, 28.0 %, and 7.5 % were in the subgroup 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively. Median Sub-PFS were 12.0, 4.1, 2.7, and 6.0 months, respectively. Patients who completed 12 months of durvalumab were 65.0 %, 27.5 %, 19.2 %, and 42.9 % across the four subgroups. In univariate analysis, the duration of durvalumab therapy was an independent factor for selecting Sub-Tx (p < 0.007). Median time to next treatment (TTNT) was 6.7 months with chemo-immunotherapy and 2.1 with chemotherapy (p = 0.009). Out of 15 patients with a TTNT > 1 year, 40 % were rechallenged with immunotherapy. Conclusion: Platinum-based chemotherapy was the predominant treatment after durvalumab consolidation. Immunotherapy rechallenge was associated with the best survival outcome in selected cases, warranting further investigation.Pubblicazioni consigliate
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.