Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

Potent responses to chemo-immunotherapy are promoting a shift toward neoadjuvant treatment for advanced endometrial cancer. Waiting six cycles often achieves a response sufficient to allow for a minimally invasive hysterectomy instead of a more extensive primary debulking surgery.

Related Insights

Trials like the dostarlimab study in rectal cancer and NICHE in colon cancer show neoadjuvant immunotherapy can induce profound responses in MSI-high tumors. This is creating a new paradigm where major surgery might be avoided entirely for some patients, marking a significant shift in treatment strategy.

The success of neoadjuvant immunotherapy trials like Niagara and those with EV-Pembro means most patients will receive immune therapy before surgery. This fundamentally shifts the clinical landscape, making the question of starting adjuvant immunotherapy less relevant as perioperative treatment becomes the standard.

Following the Keynote B21 trial, clinicians have become more selective with adjuvant immunotherapy in endometrial cancer. The study showed minimal benefit for pMMR patients and less impressive gains overall in its lower-risk population compared to advanced disease trials. This has led to a practice of reserving adjuvant chemo-IO primarily for stage 3 dMMR patients.

While chemo plus immunotherapy showed a benefit in MS-stable patients, it's not curative. The expert predicts clinicians may shift away from using it universally upfront, potentially favoring other agents first for this non-curative but beneficial therapy.

Even when neoadjuvant immunotherapy achieves an excellent systemic response in MSI-high endometrial cancer, residual disease frequently persists within the uterus. This finding cautions against forgoing hysterectomy based on imaging or systemic response alone.

The future of GYN oncology immunotherapy is diverging. For responsive cancers like endometrial, the focus is on refining biomarkers and overcoming resistance. For historically resistant cancers like ovarian, the strategy shifts to using combinatorial approaches (e.g., CAR-NKs, vaccines) to fundamentally alter the tumor microenvironment itself, making it more receptive to an immune response.

Even in elderly or frail patients with MSI-high endometrial cancer, the rapid and effective tumor response from combination chemotherapy and immunotherapy often improves quality of life so significantly that it's the preferred approach over single-agent IO.

Disparate clinical trial results in endometrial cancer suggest a mechanistic difference between immunotherapy targets. PD-1 inhibitors (dostarlimab, pembrolizumab) have shown pronounced responses, whereas the PD-L1 inhibitor atezolizumab did not, indicating that targeting the PD-1 receptor may be a more robust strategy in GYN cancers.

Early neoadjuvant trials show that while immunotherapy can eliminate metastatic endometrial cancer, residual disease often persists within the uterus. This suggests the uterus is a protected environment, tempering enthusiasm for omitting hysterectomy even in exceptional responders.

Mirroring success in rectal cancer, a new trial is exploring neoadjuvant immunotherapy for localized, MSI-high endometrial cancer. This strategy could potentially allow patients to avoid surgery and radiation, which is a particularly compelling option for those who wish to preserve their fertility.