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Influence of genomic landscape on cancer immunotherapy for newly diagnosed ovarian cancer: biomarker analyses from the IMagyn050 randomized clinical trial

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Landen, Charles N.
Molinero, Luciana
Hamidi, Habib
Sehouli, Jalid
Miller, Austin
Moore, Kathleen N.
Bookman, Michael
Lindemann, Kristina
Anderson, Charles
Berger, Regina

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en

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Purpose: To explore whether patients with BRCA1/2-mutated or homologous recombination deficient (HRD) ovarian cancers benefitted from atezolizumab in the phase III IMagyn050 (NCT03038100) trial. Patients and Methods: Patients with newly diagnosed ovarian cancer were randomized to either atezolizumab or placebo with standard chemotherapy and bevacizumab. Programmed deathligand 1 (PD-L1) status of tumor-infiltrating immune cells (IC) was determined centrally (VENTANA SP142 assay). Genomic alterations, including deleterious BRCA1/2 alterations, genomic loss of heterozygosity (gLOH), tumor mutation burden (TMB), and microsatellite instability (MSI), were evaluated using the FoundationOne assay.HRDwas defined as gLOH ≥ 16%, regardless of BRCA1/2 mutation status. Potential associations between progression-free survival (PFS) and genomic biomarkers were evaluated using standard correlation analyses and log-rank of Kaplan-Meier estimates. Results: Among biomarker-evaluable samples, 22% (234/1,050) harbored BRCA1/2 mutations and 46% (446/980) were HRD. Median TMB was low irrespective of BRCA1/2 or HRD. Only 3% (29/1,024) had TMB ≥10 mut/Mb, and 0.3% (3/1,022) were MSIhigh. PFS was better in BRCA2-mutated versus BRCA2-nonmutated tumors and in HRD versus proficient tumors. PD-L1 positivity (≥1% expression on ICs) was associated with HRD but not BRCA1/2 mutations. PFS was not improved by adding atezolizumab in BRCA2-mutated or HRD tumors; there was a trend toward enhanced PFS with atezolizumab inBRCA1-mutated tumors. Conclusions: Mostovariantumorshave lowTMBdespiteBRCA1/ 2mutations orHRD. NeitherBRCA1/2mutation norHRDpredicted enhanced benefit from atezolizumab. This is the first randomized double-blind trial in ovarian cancer demonstrating that genomic instability triggered by BRCA1/2 mutation or HRD is not associated with improved sensitivity to immune checkpoint inhibitors.

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Clinical Cancer Research

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American Association for Cancer Research Inc.

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Oncology

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