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About
The current protocol will examine the use of a plasmid DNA vaccine encoding AR, alone or with T-cell checkpoint blockade, to induce and/or augment therapeutic T-cells following androgen deprivation in patients with newly diagnosed prostate cancer scheduled to undergo prostatectomy. Patients without evidence of metastatic disease, with tissue remaining from a pre-treatment biopsy, and who are being considered for standard treatment by prostatectomy, will be invited to participate and will be on study for up to 15 months.
Full description
The original design of this protocol was to examine the use of a plasmid DNA vaccine encoding Androgen Receptor (AR), alone or with nivolumab, to induce and/or augment therapeutic T-cells following androgen deprivation in participants with newly diagnosed prostate cancer scheduled to undergo prostatectomy in one of three treatment arms. Based on emerging preclinical data that the timing of PD-1 blockade with the first immunization may be critical, and that combining PD-1 and LAG-3 blockade can improve the anti-tumor efficacy of vaccination in murine models of prostate cancer, the trial was amended to include two additional treatment arms testing the timing of PD-1 blockade and the addition of LAG-3 blockade. All participants will receive treatment with degarelix for 8 weeks prior to prostatectomy. In the first part of the study encompassing the first 3 treatment arms, participants will be also be randomized to receive either no additional treatment, a DNA vaccine encoding AR, or a DNA vaccine encoding AR and nivolumab. The additional arms will randomize patients to receive cemiplimab (PD-1 antagonist) with vaccine or cemiplimab with fianlimab (LAG-3 antagonist) and vaccine, with each agent initiated with the first immunization.
Participants receiving vaccination will begin that treatment prior to degarelix, based on preclinical findings that this may be a preferred sequence of treatment. The overall goal is to determine whether a DNA vaccine can augment the number of prostate tumor-specific infiltrating CD8+ T cells elicited with androgen deprivation, and whether this might be further augmented by combination with T-cell checkpoint blockade.
Because these cells should have cytolytic effector function, the primary clinical endpoint is pathological response (pCR and secondarily MRD) at the time of prostatectomy. This endpoint was chosen based on observations from previous clinical trials evaluating androgen deprivation therapies alone in this setting.
Safety will also be a primary objective of the current study, as this vaccine and nivolumab have not been previously used in this early stage population. An additional secondary clinical endpoint will be 1-year PSA progression-free survival, after completion of all therapy, and with evidence of testosterone recovery.
Laboratory and correlative endpoints will include whether vaccination, with or without concurrent T-cell checkpoint blockade, elicits greater numbers of CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, and whether AR-specific prostate tissue-infiltrating CD8+ T cells and persistent systemic immunity are detectable after treatment with vaccination. Other correlative studies will evaluate FLT PET/CT (Arms 1-3) as an investigational means of specifically identifying tumor infiltration by proliferating T cells as an early marker of treatment response, and whether uptake in other normal tissues is associated with autoimmune toxicity. While this is a relatively small trial, given a focus on correlative endpoints, a phase 2 expansion design was chosen to further evaluate the safety and clinical efficacy if pathological responses are observed in the initial part of the trial. If pathological responses exceeding 20% are observed, this will be considered significantly different from what has been historically observed, and would justify proceeding with future larger studies evaluating these combination approaches in the neoadjuvant stage of prostate cancer.
Primary Objectives:
Secondary Clinical Objective:
Laboratory / Correlative Objectives:
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Inclusion criteria
Histologically confirmed adenocarcinoma of the prostate
Patients must be considered candidates for prostatectomy as per standard of care
High-risk patients for recurrent disease, with high risk defined based on one of the following criteria:
Life expectancy of at least 12 months at screening
Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 0 or 1.
Adequate hematologic, renal and liver function as evidenced by the following within 4 weeks of day 1:
No known history of HIV 1 and 2, HTLV-1, or active Hepatitis B or Hepatitis C
Must have adequate tissue (ten 5µm unstained formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) sections containing prostate cancer) remaining from pre-treatment diagnostic prostate biopsy for research purposes
Patients must be willing to undergo large-volume blood draws (up to 200mL per time point) for the investigational component of this trial
For those patients who are sexually active, they must be willing to use barrier contraceptive methods during the period of treatment on this trial
Patients must be informed of the experimental nature of the study and its potential risks, and must sign an IRB-approved written informed consent form indicating such an
Ability to comply with all study procedures and willingness to remain supine for 120 minutes during imaging
Exclusion criteria
Small cell or other variant (non-adenocarcinoma) prostate cancer histology
Prior treatment for prostate cancer, including androgen deprivation therapy (ADT), orchiectomy, antiandrogens, ketoconazole, abiraterone acetate or enzalutamide
Prior radiation to the prostate
Patients may not be receiving other investigational agents or be receiving concurrent anticancer therapy other than the treatment-prescribed androgen deprivation therapy
Treatment with any of the following medications while on study is prohibited, washout period not required except as indicated:
Major surgery within 4 weeks of registration is prohibited
Active cardiac disease defined as active angina, symptomatic congestive heart failure, or myocardial infarction within 6 months of registration
Patients with known psychological or sociological conditions, addictive disorders or family problems, which would preclude compliance with the protocol
Patients who have undergone splenectomy
Patients must not have other active malignancies other than non-melanoma skin cancers or superficial bladder cancer (this includes any non-muscle invasive bladder cancer including Ta, CIS and T1), that have been adequately treated. Subjects with a history of other cancers who have been adequately treated and have been recurrence-free for > 3 years are eligible.
Any other medical intervention or condition, which, in the opinion of the principle investigator (PI) or treating physician, could compromise patient safety or adherence with the study requirements over the primary 3-6 month treatment period.
Patients who have concurrent enrollment on other phase I, II, or III investigational treatment studies cannot be actively receiving treatment and the last dose cannot be within 4 weeks.
Patients who have received a live vaccine within 14 days prior to the first dose of study treatment. Examples of live vaccines include, but are not limited to, the following: measles, mumps, rubella, varicella/zoster (chicken pox), yellow fever, rabies, Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), and typhoid vaccine. Seasonal influenza vaccines for injection are generally killed virus vaccines and are allowed; however, intranasal influenza vaccines (eg, FluMist®) are live attenuated vaccines and are not allowed
Patients with a history of life-threatening autoimmune disease or active autoimmune disease that has required systemic treatment in the past 2 years (i.e. with use of disease modifying agents, corticosteroids or immunosuppressive drugs). Replacement therapy (eg., thyroxine, insulin, or physiologic corticosteroid replacement therapy for adrenal or pituitary insufficiency, etc.) is not considered a form of systemic treatment
Patients with a history of non-infectious pneumonitis that required corticosteroid treatment, or has current pneumonitis
Patients with a history of allergic reactions to the tetanus vaccine
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
60 participants in 5 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Cancer Connect
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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