Meta-analysis finds immunotherapy improves survival in mesothelioma
This meta-analysis pooled data from 2549 patients with mesothelioma to evaluate the efficacy of immunotherapy. The primary outcome was overall survival (OS), with secondary outcomes including progression-free survival (PFS) and objective response rate (ORR).
Immunotherapy significantly improved OS compared to control (HR 0.78, p=0.0005). The benefit was similar regardless of line of therapy (first-line vs second/later-line, p=0.25) or ECOG performance status (p=0.32). However, a greater OS benefit was observed in non-epithelioid histologic subtypes compared to epithelioid (p=0.002).
A strong correlation between OS and PFS was noted (r=0.86, p=0.01), supporting PFS as a surrogate endpoint in mesothelioma trials. Safety data were not reported in this meta-analysis.
The authors did not explicitly list limitations, but as a meta-analysis, heterogeneity across trials and potential publication bias are inherent concerns. The results emphasize the importance of immunotherapy in mesothelioma and suggest that PFS may serve as a valid surrogate for OS in future trials.