Combination therapy with pepinemab plus avelumab is well tolerated and appears to have therapeutic potential in advanced non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), including immunotherapy-resistant and PD-L1-negative/-low tumours, according to the results of a phase Ib/II trial.
The single-arm trial involved 62 advanced NSCLC patients; 12 immunotherapy-naïve (ION) patients were enrolled in phase Ib, with pepinemab given at 5 mg/kg in three patients, 10 mg/kg in six, and 20 mg/kg in three. The remaining 50 patients were enrolled in phase II, of whom 18 were ION and 32 had disease that progressed following anti-PD-1/L1 monotherapy (IOF).
Among patients with IOF, seven experienced primary resistance and 18 had acquired resistance to immune checkpoint inhibitors. Only one patient in the entire cohort had a tumour with high PD-L1 expression.
The combination was well tolerated, and no major safety signals emerged. Grade 1 or 2 fatigue and infusion-related reactions were the most common adverse events. Pepinemab at 10 mg/kg plus avelumab 10 mg/kg, administered every 2 weeks, was selected as the recommended phase 2 dose.
In the ION group, five patients achieved partial response (PR), 12 had a stable disease, and four experienced progression. The corresponding disease control rate (DCR) was 81 percent. Four patients achieved durable response (≥1 year). The objective response rate was 24 percent (5/21), and the median progression-free survival was 11.6 weeks.
In the IOF group, treatment yielded a DCR of 59 percent. Two patients exhibited PR, and seven had durable clinical benefit of ≥23 weeks.
Biomarker analysis of biopsies showed high CD8 T-cell density to be correlated with RECIST response criteria.