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Journal article

Impact of Baseline Corticosteroids on Immunotherapy Efficacy in Patients With Advanced Melanoma

Abstract

This is a 2-center, retrospective study which aimed to evaluate the effect of baseline corticosteroid use on immunotherapy efficacy in patients with advanced melanoma. We included all patients with advanced unresectable and metastatic melanoma on single-agent programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) inhibitors at the Cancer Centre of Southeastern Ontario and London Regional Cancer Program. We defined baseline corticosteroid use as prednisone-equivalent of ≥10 mg within 30 days of immunotherapy initiation. Our study had 166 patients in total, and 25 were taking corticosteroids at the initiation of the PD-1 inhibitor. Baseline prednisone-equivalent ≥10 mg did not have effect on median overall survival (hazard ratio=1.590, 95% confidence interval: 0.773-3.270, P=0.208). However, a higher dose of baseline prednisone-equivalent ≥50 mg was independently associated with poor median overall survival (hazard ratio=2.313, 95% confidence interval: 1.103-4.830, P=0.026) when compared with baseline prednisone-equivalent 0-49 mg, even when controlled for confounders including baseline Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group ≥2 and baseline brain metastasis. Consideration should be made to decrease the use of unnecessary steroids as much as possible before initiation of PD-1 inhibitor treatment.

Authors

Kartolo A; Deluce J; Holstead R; Hopman W; Lenehan J; Baetz T

Journal

Journal of Immunotherapy, Vol. 44, No. 4, pp. 167–174

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer

Publication Date

May 1, 2021

DOI

10.1097/cji.0000000000000360

ISSN

1524-9557

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