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The use of chemoradiotherapy (CRT), in combination with surgery is the standard of care in the treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer. However some patients don't respond well to radiation.
More advanced radiotherapy techniques, that result in fewer toxicities, means that we are now able to combine new anti-cancer agents into standard treatment. Targeting the tumour early in this way has the potential to improve response rates.
Enadenotucirev is a specific type of anti-cancer virus that only targets cancer cells. It acts in the same way as any virus and can only survive by replicating inside cancer cells and not normal, non-cancerous cells. This means that it can selectively target and destroy tumours, without directly affecting normal cells. It also has the ability to attract cells from the body's immune system to help fight the cancer.
The addition of enadenotucirev to standard chemoradiotherapy treatment may have a combined effect on the cancer cells with potentially few, additional side effects.
This trial aims to determine the optimal dose and frequency of the virus to give by gradually increasing the number of doses each successive patient receives, and then increasing the dose of the virus itself. Each patient will receive a minimum of 3 doses, up to a maximum of 8, spread over the course of their 5 week standard chemoradiotherapy treatment. Patients will be closely monitored at all times to ensure that with each dosing group, there aren't excessive side effects.
Patients will then undergo surgery as part of their standard of care and be followed up for up to 4-6 weeks post-surgery.
This trial aims to determine the optimal dose and frequency that can then be used in future studies with the possibility of exploring the addition of Enadenotucirev to other chemoradiotherapy treatments.
Full description
At present identifying novel radiosensitising agents in colorectal cancer is an area of high need for patients considering sphincter preserving surgery or needing down staging to facilitate surgery.
Although the combination of Enadenotucirev with chemoradiation is novel, there is a wealth of evidence to support the rationale for combining this class of agent with radiation and chemotherapy.
Enadenotucirev is a group B oncolytic virus under development for the systemic treatment of metastatic or advanced epithelial tumours. Enadenotucirev is a chimeric adenovirus type 11p (Adp/adenovirus type 3 (Ad3) virus, discovered through a process of bio-selection from a library of chimeric viruses produced from a pool of adenoviruses from seven different serotypes utilizing human HT-29 colorectal cancer (CRC) cells.
Enadenotucirev shows selective and potent toxicity in humans carcinoma cells with only very limited or no toxicity to normal (non-cancerous) human cells. Other than humans, there is no known permissive species for Enadenotucirev. The principle advantage of oncolytic therapy is that the virus replicates only in diseased cells meaning that the concentration of drug is amplified at the site of pathology so that it is higher in the tumour than in healthy tissue. Virus particles spread from cell to cell within a tumour nodule until they reach non-permissive normal tissues, in principle destroying all viable tumour cells they encounter.
While the overall understanding of the mechanism of action of Enadenotucirev in humans is still under investigation, it is now well established from non-clinical and clinical studies that the mechanism of anti-cancer efficacy of oncolytic viruses not only involves direct infection and lysis of tumour cells, but that immune responses stimulated via an increased release of tumour-associated antigens and immune-inflammatory activation signals play a key role.
CEDAR is dual endpoint, dose escalation phase 1 trial using a time to event continual reassessment method (TiTE CRM). Response and Toxicity endpoints will be combined in dose escalation models to identify the optimal dose schedule. Dose decisions are made using the statistical model which uses number of Dose Limiting Toxicities (DLT) experienced in different dosing schedules, instead of just using the data from that particular dose, as in the case of 3+3 model, meaning it uses all available data to make a dose decision.
This primary objective is to determine the optimal dose and frequency of the virus by firstly gradually increasing the number of doses each successive patient receives, and then increasing the dose of the virus itself. All participants will receive 3 loading doses in weeks 1-2, prior to initiation of standard chemoradiotherapy. Further doses of Enadenotucirev will either be given after or during and after standard chemoradiotherapy and this is dependent on which of the 4 different dose groups they are assigned to. The individual doses given will be either 1x10^12 viral particles (vp) or 3x10^12 vp.
Each patient will receive a minimum of 3 doses, up to a maximum of 8, spread over the course of 9 weeks. Patients will be closely monitored at all times to ensure that with each dosing group, there aren't excessive side effects.
Patients will then undergo surgery as part of their standard of care and be followed up for 4-6 weeks after surgery.
Dose Limiting Toxicities (DLTs)
DLTs are defined as any of the following occurring between the start of trial treatment until the Week 13 visit and assessed as possibly, probably or definitely related to enadenotucirev or the interaction between enadenotucirev and radiotherapy and/or capecitabine.
Renal:
o Development of proteinuria, 2+ as measured by urinalysis and confirmed with an albumin/creatinine ratio of >3g/mmol with a 24-hour urinary protein ≥1g/24h or if there is a decline in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) (where a decline in eGFR is defined as eGFR <60ml/min/1.73m2 or a drop in eGFR by 20% from screening, baseline of previous visit), following administration of enadenotucirev, shall be classified as a DLT. No further doses of enadenotucirev will be administered to that patient.
Acute hematologic toxicity:
Acute non-hematologic toxicity:
General:
Enrollment
Sex
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Histologically confirmed invasive adenocarcinoma of the rectum
Locally advance colorectal cancer as defined by pelvic MRI with a threatened circumferential resection margin (cT3mrf+ve), or inclusion of an adjacent organ, or low tumours at/below the level of the levators or enlarged pelvic side wall nodes or selected by the multidisciplinary team MDT for treatment with neoadjuvant (chemo)radiotherapy, regardless of TNM classification
Patients with oligometastatic disease suitable for radical treatment are permitted provided that the site specific MDT deems them suitable for chemoradiation
Male or female, Age ≥ 18 years
ECOG performance score of 0 - 1
The patient is willing and able to comply with the protocol scheduled biopsy, follow-up visits and examinations for the duration of the trial.
Written (signed and dated) informed consent
Adequate renal function demonstrated by:
Adequate ≤1.5 ULN and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) ≥60 mL/min/1.73m (measured creatinine clearance ≥60 mL/min) and
Urine dipstick for proteinuria at screening and baseline negative or trace. Patients may be included with results of 1+ if they have a spot urinary albumin creatinine ratio (ACR) of either:
(i) ≤3 mg/mmol or (ii) >3 mg/mmol with a 24 hour urinary protein <1.0 g/24 hours and
Serum complement C3 and C4 within the normal range
Haematological and Biochemical indices within the ranges shown below:
Exclusion criteria
Pregnant or breast-feeding women, or women of childbearing potential unless effective methods of contraception are used.
Pulmonary lymphangitis (if metastatic disease present)
Past medical history:
Use of the following anti-viral agents: ribavirin, adefovir, lamivudine or cidofovir within 7 days prior to the first dose of trial treatment
Treatment with any other investigational agent, or participation in another interventional clinical trial within 28 days prior to enrolment. In follow up for an interventional trials and observational studies are allowed
History of DVT or pulmonary embolus in the 12 months before the first dose of study of study treatment
History of significant bleeding requiring hospitalisation in the 12 months before the first dose of study treatment
Patients receiving therapeutic or prophylactic anticoagulation therapy
Known dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPYD) deficiency
Prior chemotherapy is allowed as long as >28 days since the last administration and any toxicity has resolved to NCI CTCAE grade 1 or less
Other psychological, social or medical condition, physical examination finding or a laboratory abnormality that the investigator considers would make the patient a poor trial candidate or could interfere with protocol compliance or the interpretation of trials results
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
12 participants in 4 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Steven Davis
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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