Review Article


Is there a room for immune checkpoint inhibitors in early stage non-small cell lung cancer?

Elisa Gobbini, Matteo Giaj Levra

Abstract

Early non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) represents 16% of all new NSCLC at diagnosis with a 5-year survival rate of about 60%. Surgical intervention and adjuvant platinum-based chemotherapy represent the cornerstone treatments, but no significant advances have been achieved since several decades in term of relapse rate reduction or survival improvement. Immunotherapy represents an appealing strategy considering the acceptable toxicity profile but, despite the awesome changing recently introduced in the locally advanced and metastatic setting, its role in early NSCLC is not clear yet. In the past few years, two strategies have been investigated to improve the early NSCLC outcomes eliciting the anti-tumour immune response: tumour vaccines and adoptive cellular therapies. However, none of them provided convincing results. Preclinical and clinical data supported the prognostic role of immune checkpoints in resected NSCLC even if they did not show a clear predictive value for adjuvant treatment. However, some preliminary data about safety and efficacy of neo-adjuvant immune checkpoint inhibitors encourage further investigation of their potential role as monotherapy or as part of a multimodal strategy. Then, even if no significant progress has been done in early NSCLC treatment until today, checkpoint inhibitors can open the door to a new strategy in this setting.

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