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About
The trial will address safety and tolerability of the combination of the IDH1R132H-specific vaccine with checkpoint blockade and seeks to explore predictive biomarkers for response to checkpoint blockade in post-treatment tumor tissue. The study will enroll 48 evaluable patients (presumably, 60 in total) with IDH1R132H-mutated gliomas with an unfavorable molecular profile (no 1p/19q co-deletion, nuclear ATRX- loss) progressive after radiotherapy and alkylating chemotherapy eligible for re-resection. After diagnosis of recurrent disease on imaging patients will be randomized assigned in a 1:1:2 ratio into three arms. Arm 1 (12 patients) will receive three IDH1R132H peptide vaccines alone in two week intervals. Arm 2 (12 patients) will receive three IDH1R132H peptide vaccines in combination with three doses of Avelumab in two week intervals. Arm 3 (24 patients) will receive three doses of Avelumab in two week intervals. After 6 weeks of treatment patients (Arms 1-3) will undergo planned re-resection. Four weeks after the operation treatment will be resumed consisting of five additional vaccines (Arm 1+2) in 4 week intervals, followed by maintenance vaccines until progression in three months' intervals after a pause of 16 weeks. Avelumab will be administered in monthly intervals in Arms 2 and 3 starting four weeks after the operation until progression.
Key outcome parameters will be safety and immunogenicity (Arms 1 and 2) based on peripheral and intratumoral immune analyses assessed 9 months after re-resection.
Full description
The standard of care (SOC) treatment of patients with malignant gliomas is - independent of molecular markers - still confined to surgery, irradiation and alkylating chemotherapy as targeted therapies to date have failed to prove superiority over standard of care in controlled trials. At the same time, novel concepts in immunotherapy have evolved with the identification of potential (neo)epitopes and phase III clinical trials investigating the efficacy of checkpoint inhibitors. Despite patients frequently undergoing resection of recurrent tumor, patient selection criteria for innovative immunotherapy in glioma have been hampered by the lack of availability of post-treatment tumor tissue. Neoepitope-specific vaccines have gained considerable interest also in a challenging disease such as glioma. IDH1R132H, a frequent driver mutation in gliomas, was previously identified to contain a neoepitope. A peptide vaccine targeting this epitope is currently tested in a phase I first-in-man multicenter clinical trial. The clinical phase of this trial was completed in Q3 2017 with 32 patients treated. The primary endpoints were met by demonstrating safety and immunogenicity. Checkpoint inhibitors are tested in unselected populations of glioma patients despite evidence that response is associated with high mutational load, which is infrequent in untreated gliomas, but may occur particularly after long periods of exposure to alkylating chemotherapy.
The trial will address safety and tolerability of the combination of the IDH1R132H-specific vaccine with checkpoint blockade and seeks to explore predictive biomarkers for response to checkpoint blockade in post-treatment tumor tissue. The study will enroll 48 evaluable patients (presumably, 60 in total) with IDH1R132H-mutated gliomas with an unfavorable molecular profile (no 1p/19q co-deletion, nuclear ATRX loss) progressive after radiotherapy and alkylating chemotherapy eligible for re-resection. After diagnosis of recurrent disease on imaging patients will be randomized assigned in a 1:1:2 ratio into three arms. Arm 1 (12 patients) will receive three IDH1R132H peptide vaccines alone in two week intervals. Arm 2 (12 patients) will receive three IDH1R132H peptide vaccines in combination with three doses of Avelumab, a humanized anti-PD-L1 antibody approved for patients with Merkel cell carcinoma and urothelial cancer, in two week intervals. Arm 3 (24 patients) will receive three doses of Avelumab in two week intervals. After 6 weeks of treatment patients (Arms 1-3) will undergo planned re-resection. A safety MRI will be performed three weeks after initiation of the experimental treatment. Four weeks after the operation treatment will be resumed consisting of five additional vaccines (Arm 1+2) in 4 week intervals, followed by maintenance vaccines until progression in three months' intervals after a pause of 16 weeks. Avelumab will be administered in monthly intervals in Arms 2 and 3 starting four weeks after the operation until progression.
Key outcome parameters will be safety and immunogenicity (Arms 1 and 2) based on peripheral and intratumoral immune analyses assessed 9 months after re-resection. Additional exploratory analyses will determine efficacy (all Arms), dependent on predictive molecular immune and imaging biomarkers, such as increased mutational load (Arm 3). Based on the experience in the NOA-04 and CATNON trials the expected time to second progression is 9-12 months.
The trial is supported by the German Cancer Consortium (DKTK) and the Neurooncology Working Group of the German Cancer Society (NOA).
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Current use of immunosuppressive medication, EXCEPT for the following:
Pregnancy or lactation
Previous or concurrent experimental treatment for the tumor other than radiotherapy and alkylating chemotherapy. This includes local therapies such as interstitial radiotherapy or local chemotherapy (i.e. BCNU wafers), loco-regional hyperthermia, electric fields, and antiangiogenic therapy (such as Bevacizumab).
Abnormal (≥ Grade 2 CTCAE v4.03) laboratory values for thyroid gland: free T4 and TSH
Abnormal (≥ Grade 2 CTCAE v4.03) laboratory values for hematology, liver and renal function (serum creatinine). In detail, the following values apply as exclusion criteria:
Patients with history or presence of HIV and/or HBV/HCV positivity (positive HBV surface antigen or HCV RNA if anti-HCV antibody screening test positive)
Patients with history or known presence of tuberculosis (positive QuantiFERON®-TB Gold test (or equivalent) or tuberculin skin test). Patients with an indeterminate result of the QuantiFERON®-TB Gold test (or equivalent) are not eligible unless additional testing demonstrates a negative result (tuberculin skin test or repeated QuantiFERON®-TB Gold test/or equivalent). If a tuberculin skin test is performed, an induration of > 6 mm is "positive" for a patient with history of BCG vaccine, while an induration of > 10 mm is "positive" for a patient without history of BCG vaccine. If necessary, a QuantiFERON®-TB Gold or equivalent test might be complemented by additional specific diagnostic tests as per standard procedures.
Patients with severe infection(s) or signs/symptoms of infection within 2 weeks prior to the first administration of the study drug(s)
Active infection requiring systemic therapy
Patients who have received a live, attenuated vaccine within 4 weeks prior to the first administration of the study drug(s)
Patients with a prior solid organ transplantation or haematopoietic stem cell transplantation
Active autoimmune disease that might deteriorate when receiving an immuno-stimulatory agent. Patients with diabetes type I, vitiligo, psoriasis, or hypo- or hyperthyroid diseases not requiring immunosuppressive treatment are eligible.
Clinically significant (i.e., active) cardiovascular disease: Cerebral vascular accident/stroke (< 6 months prior to enrolment), myocardial infarction (< 6 months prior to enrolment), unstable angina, congestive heart failure (≥ New York Heart Association Classification Class II), or serious cardiac arrhythmia requiring medication.
Persisting toxicity related to prior therapy (NCI CTCAE v.4.03 Grade >1); however, alopecia, sensory neuropathy Grade ≤ 2, or other persisting toxicities Grade ≤ 2 not constituting a safety risk based on investigator´s judgement is acceptable.
Other severe acute or chronic medical conditions including colitis, inflammatory bowel disease, pneumonitis, pulmonary fibrosis or psychiatric conditions including recent (within the past year) or active suicidal ideation or behavior; or laboratory abnormalities that may increase the risk associated with study participation or study treatment administration or may interfere with the interpretation of study results and, in the judgment of the investigator, would make the patient inappropriate for entry into this study.
History of hypersensitivity to the investigational medicinal product or to any drug with similar chemical structure or to any excipient present in the pharmaceutical form of the investigational medicinal product, including known severe hypersensitivity reactions to monoclonal antibodies (NCI CTCAE v4.03 Grade ≥ 3).
Participation in other clinical trials or their observation period during the last 30 days before the first administration of the IMP(s).
Primary purpose
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69 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Michael Platten, Prof. MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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