Cancer Immunotherapy Trials Underutilize Immune Response Monitoring

  • Connell C
  • Raby S
  • Beh I
  • et al.
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Abstract

Immune-related radiological and biomarker monitoring in cancer immunotherapy trials permits interrogation of efficacy and reasons for therapeutic failure. We report the results from a cross-sectional analysis of response monitoring in 685 T-cell checkpoint-targeted cancer immunotherapy trials in solid malignancies, as registered on the U.S. National Institutes of Health trial registry by October 2016. Immune-related radiological response criteria were registered for only 25% of clinical trials. Only 38% of trials registered an exploratory immunological biomarker, and registration of immunological biomarkers has decreased over the last 15 years. We suggest that increasing the utilization of immune-related response monitoring across cancer immunotherapy trials will improve analysis of outcomes and facilitate translational efforts to extend the benefit of immunotherapy to a greater proportion of patients with cancer.

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Connell, C. M., Raby, S. E. M., Beh, I., Flint, T. R., Williams, E. H., Fearon, D. T., … Janowitz, T. (2018). Cancer Immunotherapy Trials Underutilize Immune Response Monitoring. The Oncologist, 23(1), 116–117. https://doi.org/10.1634/theoncologist.2017-0226

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