Effectiveness and safety of immune checkpoint inhibitors in Black patients versus White patients in a US national health system: a retrospective cohort study

Black patients were severely under-represented in the clinical trials that led to the approval of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) for all cancers. The aim of this study was to characterise the effectiveness and safety of ICIs in Black patients. We did a retrospective cohort study of patients in...

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Veröffentlicht in:The lancet oncology 2024-12, Vol.25 (12), p.1666-1676
Hauptverfasser: Miller, Sean, Jiang, Ralph, Schipper, Matthew, Fritsche, Lars G, Strohbehn, Garth, Wallace, Beth, Brinzevich, Daria, Falvello, Virginia, McMahon, Benjamin H, Zamora-Resendiz, Rafael, Ramnath, Nithya, Dai, Xin, Sankar, Kamya, Edwards, Donna M, Allen, Steven G, Yoo, Shinjae, Crivelli, Silvia, Green, Michael D, Bryant, Alex K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Black patients were severely under-represented in the clinical trials that led to the approval of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) for all cancers. The aim of this study was to characterise the effectiveness and safety of ICIs in Black patients. We did a retrospective cohort study of patients in the US Veterans Health Administration (VHA) system's Corporate Data Warehouse containing electronic medical records for all patients who self-identified as non-Hispanic Black or African American (referred to as Black) or non-Hispanic White (referred to as White) and received PD-1, PD-L1, CTLA-4, or LAG-3 inhibitors between Jan 1, 2010, and Dec 31, 2023. Effectiveness outcomes were overall survival, time to treatment discontinuation, and time to next treatment. The safety outcome was the frequency of immune-related adverse events; assessed among a random sample of 1000 Black patients and 1000 White patients, 892 pairs were matched on the basis of baseline characteristics using 1:1 exact matching without replacement. After manual chart review, patients who did not receive ICI therapy or who had inadequate follow-up were excluded. The adjusted effect of race on each effectiveness outcome was assessed in the whole ICI-treated cohort with propensity-weighted Cox regression with robust standard errors. Immune-related adverse events outcomes were analysed in the random matched sample with multivariable Cox regression, adjusting for baseline characteristics. We identified 26 398 patients, of whom 4943 (18·7%) patients were Black, 21 455 (81·3%) were White, 895 (3·4%) were female, 25 503 (96·6%) were male, 11 859 (45%) had non-small-cell lung cancer, and 26 045 (98·7%) received PD-1 or PD-L1 inhibitors. As of data cutoff (Aug 28, 2024), median follow-up was 40·3 months (95% CI 38·3–42·3) for Black patients and 43·9 months (43·0–45·1) for White patients. Compared with White patients, Black patients had longer time to treatment discontinuation (2-year unadjusted rates 10·7% [95% CI 9·8–11·7] for Black patients vs 8·6% [8·2–9·0] for White patients; adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 0·91, 95% CI 0·87–0·95, p
ISSN:1470-2045
1474-5488
1474-5488
DOI:10.1016/S1470-2045(24)00528-X