Purpose: Adjuvant anti-PD-1 (adj PD-1) antibodies are extensively used to improve survival in patients with resected melanoma. Clinical trials on adj PD-1 antibodies have revealed significant improvements in recurrence-free survival (RFS); however, few of these trials have included patients with acral melanoma (AM).
Methods: Clinical data were retrospectively collected from Japanese patients who underwent resection of stage III sole AM between 2014 and 2021. Survival outcomes, including RFS, distant metastasis-free survival (DMFS), and overall survival (OS), were compared between patients without adjuvant therapy (OBS group) and those receiving adj PD-1 group.
Results: This study included 139 patients (OBS: 79; adj PD-1: 60), with a median follow-up of 2.6 years. The baseline characteristics were comparable, except for age and nodal metastasis. No significant differences in survival were observed between the OBS and adj PD-1 groups (3-year RFS: 36.7% v 27.5%, P = .13; 3-year DMFS: 51.0% v 45.3%, P = .51; 3-year OS: 65.3% v 67.4%, P = .45). Multivariate analysis showed no survival benefit of adj PD-1 (RFS: hazard ratio [HR], 1.25, P = .29; DMFS: HR, 1.03, P = .89; and OS: HR, 0.69, P = .23). Each survival outcome after propensity score matching confirmed no significant difference between the matched OBS group (n = 52) and adj PD-1 group (n = 52; 3-year RFS: 34.3% v 25.9%, P = .22; 3-year DMFS: 45.6% v 46.5%, P = .85; 3-year OS: 60.7% v 68.9%, P = .29).
Conclusion: Adj PD-1 did not improve the prognosis in sole AM. However, further studies are essential to evaluate the efficacy of the adj anti-PD-1 antibody in AM.