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Combination therapy is becoming more and more general in the treatment of oncological diseases. In this clinical trial combination the standard immunotherapeutic treatment; the programmed death 1 (PD-1) regulatory antibody Nivolumab and a peptide vaccine consisting of programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) and Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) peptides will be tested in patients with metastatic melanoma. Patients will be treated with Nivolumab every second week as long as there is clinical benefit. The PD-L1/IDO peptide vaccine is given from start of Nivolumab and every second week for the first 6 vaccines and thereafter every fourth week up to 1 year.
Full description
Background:
Huge advances have been made in the treatment of metastatic melanoma (MM) the past 5 years. Especially immunotherapy has shown promising results.
Cancer cells are naturally attacked by cells of the immune system, but can induce a state of tolerance whereby they escape from immune attack. This escape is brought about by many mechanisms. An important one is the programmed death pathway (PD-1/PD-L1). PD-L1 is commonly overexpressed on cancer cells. Interaction of PD-1 on activated T cells and PD-L1 on cancer cells lead to inhibition of the cytotoxic T cells. Another important mechanism is through overexpression of the metabolic enzyme IDO on cancer cells. Activation of IDO also inhibits cytotoxic T cells.
Investigators have recently identified spontaneous T cell reactivity against PD-L1 and IDO in the tumor microenvironment and in the peripheral blood of patients with MM and healthy donors. Both IDO and PD-L1 reactive CD8 T cells are cytotoxic and can kill cancer cells and immune regulatory cells in vitro.. Thus boosting specific T cells that recognize immune regulatory proteins such as IDO and PD-L1 may directly modulate immune regulation.
Due to distinct mechanisms of action, the combination of treatment with a monoclonal antibody targeting PD-1 (Nivolumab) and a vaccine with peptides against PD-L1 and IDO may have a synergistic effect.
Investigators have previously reported a phase I trial where, the IDO peptide was tested in 15 patients with MM in combination with Ipilimumab, and no grade 3-4 toxicity was seen. The PD-L1 peptide is currently being tested in a first-in-man study in patients with multiple myeloma.
Methods:
A two-step clinical phase I/II trial design will be used, starting out with a pilot study including 6 patients with MM to test feasibility and tolerability. If the treatment is found feasible the study will be extended to a phase II study with 24 patients. The objective is to describe anti-tumor immune responses and objective responses using RECIST 1.1.
Patients will be treated with Nivolumab in accordance with standard regimen, which involves outpatient IV infusions every second week as long as there is clinical benefit. The PD-L1/IDO peptide vaccine is given from start of Nivolumab and every second week for the first 6 vaccines and thereafter every fourth week up to 1 year. 15 vaccines will be administered in total.
Patients will be followed with clinical controls and diagnostic imaging every 12 weeks. Patients who receive all vaccines will have follow up after 3 and 6 months in parallel with standard of care treatment for Nivolumab.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Age ≥ 18
The patient has unrespectable or metastatic melanoma with progressive, persistent or recurrent disease on or following treatment with standard of care agents
Patients belonging to one of the following patient groups will be enrolled:
Cohort A: Anti PD-1/PD-L1 naïve patients (30 patients). The patient is a candidate for Nivolumab monotherapy. Prior anti-PD-1/anti-PD-L1 antibody treatment is not allowed.
OR Cohort B: Extension cohort (10 patients). Progressive disease ON anti-PD-1 monotherapy.Subjects should not have experienced serious and/or life-threatening toxicity to antibody therapy.
OR Cohort C: Extension cohort (10 patients). Progressive disease during follow up OFF anti-PD-1 after clinical benefit (SD/PR/CR) on anti-PD-1 therapy. Subjects should not have discontinued antibody therapy due to serious and/or lifethreatening toxicity
At least one measurable parameter according to RECIST 1.1.
The patient has an ECOG performance status of 0 or 1
The patient is a female of childbearing potential with negative pregnancy test
For women: Agreement to use contraceptive methods with a failure rate of < 1 % per year during the treatment period and for at least 120 days after the treatment
For men: Agreement to use contraceptive measures and agreement to refrain from donating sperm
The patient has met the following hematological and biochemical criteria:
Signed declaration of content after oral and written information about the protocol.
Exclusion criteria
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48 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Inge Marie Svane, Prof., MD; Cathrine Lund Lorentzen, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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