Immunotherapy, in particular immune response checkpoint inhibitors, has shown to be extremely effective in terms of survival in locally advanced or metastatic nonsmall cell lung cancer, as a second line treatment in PS 0 or PS 1 patients who have progressed following platinumbased first line chemotherapy. In squamous cell cancers, nivolumab, a PD1 antibody, enables an overall survival of 9.2 months vs 6 months to be achieved, HR = 0.59; P < 0.001; in non-squamous cell carcinoma, the benefit is of the same order (12.2 months vs 9.4 months, HR = 0.73; P = 0.002), but clearly correlated to the PDL1 expression rate by the tumour cells, with no benefit for patients without expression, and a considerable benefit for those patients with strong expression. This is confirmed through trials using pembrolizumab, another PD1 antibody, with an increase in survival over docetaxel (HR = 0.71; P = 0.0008), with a more considerable benefit seen in the sub-group of patients who have PDL1 expression > 50% and, more recently, with a PDL1 antibody, atezolizumab, which in a phase II randomised study showed an increase in survival of 12.6 vs 9.7 months compared with docetaxel, HR = 0.73; P = 0.04, which correlated with the PDL1 expression rate from the tumour and immune cells. The tolerance of these drugs is good; however, with rare, but often serious immune type events, they require specific management. Numerous questions remain unanswered regarding specific populations: the elderly, those with co-morbidities, those who are PS 2 and those with brain metastases. Finally, numerous trials are ongoing, evaluating the use of these second line immunotherapies, given concomitantly or not with chemotherapy.