Neoadjuvant ipilimumab plus nivolumab in melanoma: 5-year survival and biomarker analysis from the phase 2 PRADO-trial.

  • Post category:Melanoma
  • Reading time:1 min read

Journal: Nature medicine

This phase 2 PRADO cohort of the OpACIN-neo study reports 5‑year outcomes for 99 patients with stage III macroscopic melanoma treated with neoadjuvant ipilimumab plus nivolumab.

Key efficacy findings (5-year estimates):

  • Event-free survival: 71%
  • Relapse-free survival: 74%
  • Distant metastasis–free survival: 79%
  • Overall survival: 86%

Toxicity:

  • Persistent grade 1–2 immune-related adverse events in 69% of surviving patients, mainly vitiligo and hypothyroidism; no higher-grade late toxicities are described in the abstract.

Biomarkers and response:

  • Major pathologic response (MPR) was strongly associated with favorable long-term outcomes.
  • High tumor mutational burden (TMB), high interferon-gamma (IFNγ) gene signature, and PD-L1 expression ≥1% each correlated with better outcomes.
  • Patients with all three biomarkers “high” had:
    • 100% MPR rate
    • 100% 5-year event-free survival
  • Patients with all three biomarkers “low” had:
    • 18% MPR rate
    • 41% 5-year event-free survival

Clinical implications:

  • Neoadjuvant ipilimumab plus nivolumab yields durable long-term control in stage III melanoma, especially in those achieving MPR.
  • Baseline IFNγ signature and PD-L1, together with TMB, emerge as promising predictors of deep pathologic response and long-term benefit.

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