Concurrent use of medications can modulate the effectiveness of immunotherapy. Although this interaction is well documented for immune checkpoint inhibitors, whether this occurs with new experimental compounds has not been evaluated. A computerized data extraction tool was used to collect clinical data and identify the prescription of a predefined set of medications within 30 days of immunotherapy infusion in the Department of Investigational Cancer Therapeutics at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. The primary endpoints were median overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival. Tumor responses were addressed using RECIST. We identified 897 patients. The most prevalent tumor types were colorectal (24.5%), head and neck (10.5%), and pancreatic (9.4%). The immunotherapy administered consisted of monoclonal antibodies and fusion proteins (64.7%), immune modulators (IMs; 20.8%), combinations of IMs and antibodies (9.2%), and oncolytic viruses and cancer vaccines (5.3%). The most frequently prescribed drugs were narcotics (70.5%), antiemetics (49.1%), antihistamines (34.6%), antibiotics (31.2%), and proton pump inhibitors (PPIs; 28.7%). Patients receiving antihistamines exhibited increased rates of stable disease and partial response (chi-squared = 8.48; P = 0.014) on the IMs and antibodies combination. The benefit of antihistamines was confirmed in a multivariate analysis of OS (HR, 0.752 95% CI, 0.603-0.938; P = 0.012). For patients with colorectal cancer, PPI use was associated with shortened survival, with a median OS of 5.2 months with PPI use and 8.6 months without it (P < 0.001). Our findings highlight the need for strategies to guide concurrent medication choices for patients receiving immunotherapy in early-phase trials.
Xavier et al. (Wed,) studied this question.