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Ovarian clear cell carcinoma (OCCC) is a relatively rare but highly malignant epithelial ovarian cancer, accounting for 5%-10% of all ovarian cancers. The incidence of this tumor has significant racial disparity, with the highest incidence in Asians, accounting for 25% of ovarian cancer patients, while in European and American ovarian cancer patients, it only accounts for 4.8%. Due to the unique biological behavior of OCCC, it responds poorly to traditional platinum-based chemotherapy regimens, and the prognosis of patients with advanced and recurrent disease is extremely poor.
OCCC has low sensitivity to platinum-based chemotherapy, especially in recurrent or persistent disease, and the objective response rate (ORR) of chemotherapy is usually less than 10%. Although immunotherapy has shown good results in OCCC, 60% of patients still cannot shrink their tumors after using combination regimens, and 50% of patients will still progress after 6.9 months of treatment. The question of how to treat OCCC after progression on immunotherapy remains a pressing issue. Sacituzumab (SKB264) is an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) consisting of a humanized anti-trophoblast cell surface antigen 2 (Trop-2) monoclonal antibody conjugated to T030. In the KL264-I-01 study (which included patients with OCCC) in patients with recurrent ovarian cancer, single-agent Sacituzumab achieved an objective response rate of 40%, superior to conventional chemotherapy, with manageable toxicity. OCCC patients who progress on immunotherapy face a dilemma of limited treatment options. Based on this current situation and the potential activity of Sacituzumab the investigators propose Sacituzumab as an option for patients with OCCC after immunotherapy progression.
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Ovarian clear cell carcinoma (OCCC) is a relatively rare but highly malignant epithelial ovarian cancer, accounting for 5%-10% of all ovarian cancers. The incidence of this tumor has significant racial disparity, with the highest incidence in Asians, accounting for 25% of ovarian cancer patients, while in European and American ovarian cancer patients, it only accounts for 4.8%. Due to the unique biological behavior of OCCC, it responds poorly to traditional platinum-based chemotherapy regimens, and the prognosis of patients with advanced and recurrent disease is extremely poor.
OCCC has low sensitivity to platinum-based chemotherapy, especially in recurrent or persistent disease, and the objective response rate (ORR) of chemotherapy is usually less than 10%. The OCCC tumor microenvironment indicates that OCCC is a "hot tumor," suggesting that patients may benefit from immunotherapy. This benefit has been confirmed in clinical studies. Although immunotherapy has shown good results in OCCC, 60% of patients still cannot shrink their tumors after using combination regimens, and 50% of patients will still progress after 6.9 months of treatment. The question of how to treat OCCC after progression on immunotherapy remains a pressing issue. Sacituzumab (SKB264) is an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) consisting of a humanized anti-trophoblast cell surface antigen 2 (Trop-2) monoclonal antibody conjugated to T030. In the KL264-I-01 study (which included patients with OCCC) in patients with recurrent ovarian cancer, single-agent Sacituzumab achieved an objective response rate of 40%, superior to conventional chemotherapy, with manageable toxicity. OCCC patients who progress on immunotherapy face a dilemma of limited treatment options. Based on this current situation and the potential activity of Sacituzumab the investigators propose Sacituzumab as an option for patients with OCCC after immunotherapy progression.
The investigators plan to conduct a prospective, real-world clinical study to enroll patients with OCCC who have developed resistance to immunotherapy and receive Sacituzumab (5 mg/kg intravenous infusion, 2 weeks of treatment). The investigators will prospectively observe and collect treatment responses, efficacy data, and safety events, and compare the efficacy with that of a historical cohort of immunotherapy-resistant patients who received traditional chemotherapy.
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22 participants in 1 patient group
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Jing Li, doctor; Yanan Lu, master
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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