Study: Pembrolizumab improves outcomes for endometrial cancer treatment

UAB was one of four sites leading a clinical trial to evaluate the effectiveness of adding Pembrolizumab to endometrial cancer care.
Written by: Hadley Turner
Media contact: Brianna Hoge


1204508132434883.0wxVKmXRxvrvmXwa1FjY height640Charles A. Leath, III, M.D.
Photography: Steve Wood
A new study published in the New England Journal of Medicine evaluated the effectiveness of adding Pembrolizumab to the current front-line standard of care for women with advanced primary or recurrent endometrial cancer.  

The study’s primary objective was to evaluate the effectiveness of adding Pembrolizumab to chemotherapy as a treatment for women diagnosed with advanced primary or recurrent endometrial cancer. Pembrolizumab is a type of immunotherapy that stimulates the body’s immune system to fight cancer cells.

The participants who received Pembrolizumab in addition to the current front-line standard of care treatment of chemotherapy, specifically paclitaxel plus carboplatin, demonstrated a marked improvement in outcomes as compared to those women who received the chemotherapy alone. Specifically, in patients with advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer, the addition of Pembrolizumab to standard care chemotherapy resulted in significantly longer progression-free survival than with chemotherapy alone.

“With the marked improvement in outcomes as presented and reported in the NEJM publication,” said Charles A. Leath, III, M.D., director of the University of Alabama at Birmingham Division of Gynecologic Oncology. “This study will likely lead to a change in the current management of women with advanced primary or recurrent endometrial cancer. It is exceedingly likely that the FDA will approve this combination for use as the preferred primary treatment.” 

Leath says the potential impacts of this study are significant, as it may lead to a change in the current management of women with advanced primary or recurrent endometrial cancer.

To see more cancer clinical trials that are available at UAB, click here.