
A new study observed an independent association between high body mass index (BMI) and improved survival with atezolizumab in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients.
“High body mass index (BMI) is independently associated with overall survival benefit from immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy in patients with melanoma, yet whether BMI is associated with outcomes in patients with advanced non–small cell lung cancer treated with atezolizumab remains unknown,” the authors observed.
For the study, published in JAMA Oncology, individual patient-level data were collected from four international, multi-center clinical trials. Two studies, BIRCH and FIR, were single-arm phase 2 trials, and the other two, POPLAR (phase 2) and OAK (phase 3), were two-arm randomized clinical trials. Advanced NSCLC patients who had not undergone previous treatment or underwent at least one line of systemic therapy who had measurable disease and functional organs and no contraindications for chemotherapy or immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy were eligible for inclusion.