Background: immune checkpoint inhibitors(ICIs) have shown contradictory results in patients with advanced gastro-oesophageal junction/gastric cancer(GOJ/GC).
Aim: to identify specific patient subgroups that would derive survival benefit from ICIs.
Methods: a subgroup meta-analysis of randomised clinical trials(RCTs) was carried out.
Results: four phase-III-RCTs were identified with data on the following variables: primary location(Gastric vs GOJ); age(≤ 65 vs >65); gender(male vs female); ECOG PS(0 vs 1); ethnicity (Asian vs non-Asian), histology(intestinal vs diffuse), PD-L1 expression(≥ 1% vs < 1%). PD-L1 positivity was significantly associated with survival benefit from ICIs (HR: 0.82, p 0.047), with a significant interaction between PD-L1 expression and ICI efficacy (interaction HR: 1.41, p 0.02). Numerically, the second most relevant interaction was ICI efficacy and gender, with ICI being more effective in males.
Conclusion: The PD-L1 positive patient subgroup derives significant survival benefit from ICI in GOJ/GC, however other predictors are eagerly needed to further refine patient selection.
Keywords: Gastric adenocarcinoma; Gastro-oesophageal junction cancer; Immune checkpoint inhibitors; Subgroup meta-analysis.
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