A large number of patient dropouts caused by immune side effects have forced Merck to end a late-stage trial of its anti-TIGIT drug vibostolimab in skin cancer.
Because of the dropouts, Merck unblinded the 1,594-person study and said it was unlikely it would hit statistical significance. The Phase 3 trial was studying the efficacy of vibostolimab plus Keytruda versus Keytruda alone, in patients with resected, high-risk stage IIB-IV melanoma.
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