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TIL therapy and engineered viral vector immunotherapies show pooled ORR of 37.8% in advanced melanoma

TIL therapy and engineered viral vector immunotherapies show pooled ORR of 37.8% in advanced…
Photo by National Cancer Institute / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Consider TIL therapy and engineered viral vector immunotherapies as complementary options for advanced melanoma.

This Bayesian meta-analysis synthesizes evidence from 13 eligible studies regarding TIL therapy and engineered viral vector immunotherapies within advanced melanoma treatment paradigms. The primary outcome assessed was objective response rate, while secondary outcomes included progression-free survival, overall survival, and treatment-related adverse events.

The pooled objective response rate estimate for studies in the Bayesian quantitative synthesis was 37.8% with a 95% highest density interval of 30.6%-45.3%. Sensitivity analysis excluding Cui et al. (2022) yielded a pooled ORR estimate of 38.3% with a 95% HDI of 30.4%-46.2%. Median progression-free survival for TIL therapy was 7.2 months and overall survival was 25.8 months.

Limitations include heterogeneity, sparse reporting, and inconsistent endpoint definitions. The certainty of evidence for objective response rate was moderate, whereas survival and safety outcomes were downgraded due to these factors. Treatment-related adverse events were noted as a secondary outcome, but specific rates or discontinuations were not reported.

The authors conclude that these therapies should support complementary rather than competing roles in advanced melanoma management.

Study Details

Study typeMeta analysis
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedJun 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
Melanoma remains one of the most treatment-refractory malignancies due to immune evasion, high mutational burden, and profound tumor heterogeneity. Although immune checkpoint inhibitors have transformed frontline management, a substantial proportion of patients develop resistance or experience relapse, underscoring the need for alternative and complementary immunotherapeutic strategies. Tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) therapy and engineered viral vector-based immunotherapies represent mechanistically distinct yet clinically promising approaches for advanced melanoma. This systematic review and Bayesian meta-analysis evaluated the comparative efficacy of TIL therapy and engineered viral vector immunotherapies in advanced melanoma. A structured search of PubMed, Embase, Scopus, and Web of Science (2015-2025) identified 13 eligible studies, including four randomized controlled trials and nine prospective single-arm studies, reporting objective response rate (ORR), progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS), and treatment-related adverse events. Eight studies met criteria for inclusion in the Bayesian quantitative synthesis of ORR outcomes. Risk of bias and certainty of evidence were assessed using Cochrane and GRADE frameworks. TIL therapy demonstrated substantial standalone efficacy, particularly in PD-1-refractory populations, with reported ORRs reaching 49%, median PFS of 7.2 months, and OS extending to 25.8 months. Viral vector-based therapies, including talimogene laherparepvec (T-VEC) and RP1, showed more modest monotherapy activity but demonstrated improved responses when combined with immune checkpoint inhibitors. Among the studies included in the Bayesian quantitative synthesis, the pooled ORR estimate was 37.8% (95% highest density interval [HDI]: 30.6%-45.3%). Sensitivity analysis excluding the small-sample Cui et al. (2022) study yielded a similar pooled estimate of 38.3% (95% HDI: 30.4%-46.2%). Exploratory meta-regression supported the overall robustness of the findings. Certainty of evidence for ORR was moderate, whereas survival and safety outcomes were downgraded due to heterogeneity, sparse reporting, and inconsistent endpoint definitions. Collectively, these findings support complementary rather than competing roles for TIL and engineered viral vector immunotherapies within evolving melanoma treatment paradigms. The results further highlight the potential importance of biomarker-guided sequencing strategies, including viral immune priming followed by adoptive cellular therapy, as a framework for optimizing personalized immunotherapy in both refractory and earlier-line melanoma settings.
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