Perioperative Enfortumab Vedotin and Pembrolizumab in Bladder Cancer.
Summary
Perioperative Enfortumab Vedotin and Pembrolizumab in Bladder Cancer. Original Article Abstract Background Patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer who are ineligible for cisplatin-based chemotherapy proceed directly to radical cystectomy with pelvic lymph-node dissection. Perioperative therapy may improve outcomes in this population. Methods In this phase 3, open-label trial, participants with muscle-invasive bladder cancer who were ineligible for or declined cisplatin-based chemot
Content
# Perioperative Enfortumab Vedotin and Pembrolizumab in Bladder Cancer.
*Original Article*
# Abstract
## Background
Patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer who are ineligible for
cisplatin-based chemotherapy proceed directly to radical cystectomy with pelvic
lymph-node dissection. Perioperative therapy may improve outcomes in this
population.
## Methods
In this phase 3, open-label trial, participants with muscle-invasive
bladder cancer who were ineligible for or declined cisplatin-based chemotherapy
were randomly assigned to perioperative (neoadjuvant and adjuvant) enfortumab
vedotin, an antibody-drug conjugate directed at nectin-4, plus pembrolizumab and
surgery (9 total cycles of enfortumab vedotin [1.25 mg per kilogram of body
weight on days 1 and 8] plus 17 total cycles of pembrolizumab [200 mg on day 1
every 3 weeks], with surgery after 3 cycles) or surgery alone (control). The
primary end point was event-free survival. Key secondary end points were overall
survival and pathological complete response (absence of viable tumor after
surgical resection). Other secondary end points included safety.
## Results
A total of 344 participants underwent randomization (170 in the
enfortumab vedotin-pembrolizumab group and 174 in the control group). At data
cutoff, median follow-up was 25.6 months (range, 11.8 to 53.7). Surgery was
performed in 87.6% of participants in the enfortumab vedotin-pembrolizumab group
and in 89.7% in the control group. At 2 years, estimated event-free survival was
74.7% in the enfortumab vedotin-pembrolizumab group and 39.4% in the control
group (hazard ratio for an event or death, 0.40; 95% confidence interval [CI],
0.28 to 0.57; two-sided P<0.001); estimated overall survival was 79.7% and 63.1%
(hazard ratio for death, 0.50; 95% CI, 0.33 to 0.74; two-sided P<0.001). A
pathological complete response had occurred in 57.1% and 8.6% of the
participants (estimated difference, 48.3 percentage points; 95% CI, 39.5 to
56.5; two-sided P<0.001). Adverse events occurred in all participants in the
enfortumab vedotin-pembrolizumab group (grade ≥3, 71.3%; grade ≥3 drug-related,
45.5%) and in 64.8% in the control group (grade ≥3, 45.9%).
## Conclusions
Perioperative enfortumab vedotin plus pembrolizumab and surgery led
to significantly better event-free and overall survival outcomes and a greater
percentage of participants with pathological complete response than surgery
alone in a predominantly cisplatin-ineligible population with muscle-invasive
bladder cancer. Safety was also assessed. (Funded by Merck Sharp and Dohme, a
subsidiary of Merck [Rahway, NJ]; KEYNOTE-905 ClinicalTrials.gov number,
NCT03924895.).
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DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2511674