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JEM-2025-1847 Original Research
Efficacy of Novel Immunotherapy Combinations in Treatment-Resistant Melanoma
Chen, Wei; Martinez, Sofia; Okonkwo, Chidi; Nakamura, Yuki; Thompson, David
Submission Details
Date Submitted December 15, 2025
Article Type Original Research
Subject Area Oncology / Immunotherapy
Handling Editor Dr. Sarah Chen
Associate Editor Dr. James Wilson
Days in Review 23 days
Abstract
Background: Treatment-resistant melanoma remains a significant clinical challenge despite advances in immunotherapy. Combination approaches targeting multiple immune checkpoints have shown promise in preclinical studies but require rigorous clinical evaluation.

Methods: We conducted a multicenter, randomized, double-blind Phase II trial enrolling 312 patients with advanced melanoma who had progressed on prior anti-PD-1 therapy. Patients were randomized 1:1:1 to receive: (A) nivolumab plus ipilimumab, (B) nivolumab plus relatlimab, or (C) nivolumab plus experimental agent XYZ-4821. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival (PFS); secondary endpoints included overall survival (OS), objective response rate (ORR), and safety.

Results: At median follow-up of 18.3 months, median PFS was 4.2 months (arm A), 5.8 months (arm B), and 8.1 months (arm C). The combination of nivolumab plus XYZ-4821 demonstrated superior PFS compared to nivolumab plus ipilimumab (HR 0.62, 95% CI 0.44-0.87, p=0.006). Grade 3-4 treatment-related adverse events occurred in 42%, 28%, and 31% of patients in arms A, B, and C, respectively.

Conclusions: The novel combination of nivolumab plus XYZ-4821 showed improved efficacy with a manageable safety profile in treatment-resistant melanoma, warranting further investigation in Phase III trials.
Melanoma Immunotherapy Checkpoint inhibitors Combination therapy Treatment resistance Clinical trial
Authors & Affiliations
Corresponding Author Wei Chen, MD, PhD
Department of Medical Oncology
Memorial Cancer Institute
[email protected]
Co-Authors Sofia Martinez, MD — University Hospital Barcelona
Chidi Okonkwo, PhD — Lagos University Teaching Hospital
Yuki Nakamura, MD — Tokyo Medical University
David Thompson, MD — Johns Hopkins Medicine
Funding & Disclosures
Funding Sources National Institutes of Health (R01-CA234567)
Melanoma Research Foundation
XYZ Pharmaceuticals (investigator-initiated grant)
Conflicts of Interest W. Chen: Consulting fees from XYZ Pharmaceuticals, Bristol-Myers Squibb
S. Martinez: None declared
C. Okonkwo: Research funding from Merck
Y. Nakamura, D. Thompson: None declared
3 Total Invited
1 Awaiting Response
1 Declined
flag Target: 2 reviews needed Due: Jan 15, 2026
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Dr. Sarah Kim hasn't responded in 20 days
Invitation sent Dec 18, 2025 • No reminder sent yet
Assigned Reviewers
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MJ
Dr. Michael Johnson
Stanford University School of Medicine
assignment 0 other pending reviews
Invited Dec 18, 2025
Accepted Dec 20, 2025
Submitted Jan 3, 2026
4
Originality
5
Methodology
4
Significance
3
Presentation
edit_note Minor Revision
Comments to Author
This is a well-designed Phase II trial addressing an important clinical question in treatment-resistant melanoma. The novel combination with XYZ-4821 shows promising efficacy signals. However, I have several suggestions for improvement:

1. The statistical analysis section needs clarification regarding the handling of patients who discontinued treatment early.

2. Figure 2 would benefit from including confidence intervals for the Kaplan-Meier curves.

3. The discussion should address the potential mechanisms underlying the observed differences in toxicity profiles between arms.
lock Confidential Comments to Editor
Overall, this is a solid manuscript that merits publication with minor revisions. The combination therapy shows genuine promise, and the data quality is high. My main concern is the relatively short follow-up period — I would recommend the authors include a note about planned long-term follow-up studies. I have no concerns about scientific integrity or ethical issues.
SK
Dr. Sarah Kim
Johns Hopkins Medicine
assignment 2 other pending reviews
Awaiting Response
Invited Dec 18, 2025
Response Pending (20 days) ⚠️
RP
Dr. Robert Patel
MD Anderson Cancer Center
Declined
Invited Dec 16, 2025
Declined Dec 17, 2025 — "Conflict of interest"
Manuscript Files
picture_as_pdf
JEM-2025-1847_Manuscript.pdf
2.4 MB • Uploaded Dec 15, 2025
description
JEM-2025-1847_Manuscript_Source.docx
856 KB • Uploaded Dec 15, 2025
draft
Cover_Letter.pdf
124 KB • Uploaded Dec 15, 2025
Figures & Tables
image
Figure_1_StudyDesign.tiff
4.8 MB • 300 DPI • Uploaded Dec 15, 2025
image
Figure_2_KaplanMeier_PFS.tiff
3.2 MB • 300 DPI • Uploaded Dec 15, 2025
table_chart
Table_1_PatientCharacteristics.xlsx
48 KB • Uploaded Dec 15, 2025
Supplementary Materials
picture_as_pdf
Supplementary_Appendix.pdf
1.1 MB • Uploaded Dec 15, 2025
database
Clinical_Trial_Data.csv
892 KB • Uploaded Dec 15, 2025
Editor Notes
lock Notes are only visible to editors and editorial staff
MH
Maria Hernandez
Dec 16, 2025 at 9:15 AM
push_pin Pinned Word count exceeded — author notified
Initial submission was 1,200 words over the limit. Contacted author on Dec 16 to request shortened version. Author confirmed they will revise and resubmit by Dec 20.
SC
Dr. Sarah Chen
Dec 18, 2025 at 3:45 PM
Backup reviewers identified
If current reviewers don't respond by Dec 28, consider inviting:
• Dr. Amanda Foster (UCLA) — reviewed similar immunotherapy paper last year
• Dr. Raj Patel (Cleveland Clinic) — expertise in melanoma trials
JW
Dr. James Wilson
Dec 15, 2025 at 10:22 AM
Initial assessment
Strong methodology and promising results. The XYZ-4821 combination data is particularly interesting. Recommend expedited review given potential clinical impact. Authors have good track record with this journal.
Version History
Version Date Submitted Decision Files
JEM-2025-1847 Current Dec 15, 2025 Under Review View Files
Activity Log
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Review Submitted Jan 3, 2026 at 2:45 PM
Dr. Michael Johnson submitted their review. Recommendation: Minor Revision.
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Reminder Sent Dec 28, 2025 at 9:00 AM
Automated reminder sent to Dr. Sarah Kim regarding pending invitation response.
Email Opened Dec 20, 2025 at 11:28 AM
Dr. Michael Johnson opened the invitation email.
Email Link Clicked Dec 20, 2025 at 11:30 AM
Dr. Michael Johnson clicked "Accept Invitation" link.
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Reviewer Accepted Dec 20, 2025 at 11:32 AM
Dr. Michael Johnson accepted the review invitation. Due date: Jan 10, 2026.
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Reviewers Invited Dec 18, 2025 at 3:15 PM
Review invitations sent to Dr. Michael Johnson and Dr. Sarah Kim.
By Dr. Sarah Chen
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Reviewer Declined Dec 17, 2025 at 4:22 PM
Dr. Robert Patel declined the review invitation. Reason: Conflict of interest.
Email Opened Dec 17, 2025 at 4:20 PM
Dr. Robert Patel opened the invitation email.
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Reviewer Invited Dec 16, 2025 at 10:08 AM
Review invitation sent to Dr. Robert Patel.
By Dr. Sarah Chen
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Email Bounced Dec 15, 2025 at 6:45 PM
Invitation email to Dr. Anna Martinez bounced. Invalid email address.
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Editor Assigned Dec 15, 2025 at 4:30 PM
Manuscript assigned to Dr. Sarah Chen (Editor-in-Chief) with Dr. James Wilson as Associate Editor.
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Manuscript Submitted Dec 15, 2025 at 2:18 PM
Original submission received from Wei Chen (corresponding author).
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Page 1 of 24
Efficacy of Novel Immunotherapy Combinations in Treatment-Resistant Melanoma: A Multi-Center Randomized Controlled Trial
Wei Chen1,2*, Sofia Martinez1, Chidi Okonkwo3, Yuki Nakamura4, David Thompson1
ABSTRACT
Background: Treatment-resistant melanoma remains a significant clinical challenge despite advances in immunotherapy. This study evaluates the efficacy of novel combination immunotherapy regimens in patients who have failed first-line treatment.

Methods: We conducted a multi-center, randomized controlled trial involving 342 patients with treatment-resistant stage III/IV melanoma across 28 academic medical centers. Patients were randomized to receive either combination anti-PD-1/anti-CTLA-4 therapy with a novel TIM-3 inhibitor (n=171) or standard combination therapy (n=171).

Results: The primary endpoint of progression-free survival was significantly improved in the experimental arm (median 11.2 months vs 6.8 months; HR 0.58; 95% CI 0.44-0.76; p<0.001). Overall response rate was 48% in the experimental arm compared to 31% in the control arm (p=0.002). Grade 3-4 adverse events were comparable between groups.

Conclusions: The addition of TIM-3 inhibition to standard combination immunotherapy significantly improves outcomes in treatment-resistant melanoma with an acceptable safety profile. These findings support further investigation in earlier treatment settings.
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Manuscript Status
2 of 3 reviews received. Review from Dr. Emily Watson is still pending.
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Manuscript topic does not align with the journal's aims and scope.
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Methodology, analysis, or conclusions have significant issues that cannot be addressed through revision.
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Findings do not represent a sufficient advance over existing literature.
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