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While direct comparative trials are lacking, experts note that single-agent activity appears higher for PD-1 inhibitors (pembrolizumab, dostarlimab) than PD-L1 inhibitors (avelumab, durvalumab) in endometrial cancer, leading to a clinical preference for the PD-1 class.
The treatment landscape for platinum-resistant ovarian cancer has rapidly evolved into a biomarker-driven paradigm. Clinicians must now test for and choose between therapies targeting distinct markers like folate receptor alpha (mirvetuximab), HER2 (T-DXd), and PD-L1 (pembrolizumab), requiring a sophisticated sequencing strategy.
The GOG-B21 trial found that while adding pembrolizumab to chemotherapy benefits the dMMR subgroup, it paradoxically leads to worse outcomes in the pMMR subgroup. This highlights the critical need for molecular testing to avoid potential harm.
Based on translational data from the RUBY trial, experts are most cautious about recommending frontline checkpoint inhibitors for patients in the "No Specific Molecular Profile" (NSMP) subgroup of pMMR endometrial cancer, suggesting this group may not benefit.
Data from the Podium-303 trial's crossover arm suggests that waiting to use a PD-1 inhibitor after progression on chemotherapy is less effective than using it concurrently from the start. This supports the synergistic effect of chemo-immunotherapy and favors the concurrent approach as the standard of care.
After numerous failed trials suggested immunotherapy was ineffective in ovarian cancer, the KEYNOTE B96 study marks a turning point. Combining pembrolizumab with chemotherapy showed statistically significant improvements in both progression-free and overall survival in platinum-resistant patients, reviving the entire therapeutic class for this disease.
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.
Despite the KEYNOTE-B96 trial showing a statistically significant survival benefit, the expert's enthusiasm for adding pembrolizumab in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer is only "neutral." This hesitation stems from challenges in sequencing it with other effective therapies and uncertainty about which patient subgroups truly benefit.
For endometrial or cervical cancer patients who progress after receiving a checkpoint inhibitor, re-challenging with a single-agent immunotherapy is a less desirable approach. Emerging data suggests that a combination therapy—such as an ICI paired with a TKI like lenvatinib or a bispecific antibody—offers a more promising chance of response.
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.
While checkpoint inhibitors are standard for dMMR endometrial cancer, a clear clinical boundary is emerging for the pMMR subgroup. Based on trial data showing no benefit for fully resected disease (e.g., B21 trial), oncologists are not offering immunotherapy to pMMR patients without measurable disease, avoiding significant toxicity without proven efficacy.