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Our recent trials combining local radiotherapy with intratumoral administration of TLR agonists - referred to as 'in situ vaccination' - for patients with low-grade lymphoma demonstrated safety, induction of anti-tumor CD8 T cell responses and partial and complete remissions of patients' non-irradiated sites of disease with complete remissions lasting from months to more than three years.
This iteration of the in situ vaccine approach builds on our prior work in ways that should improve its efficacy, by adding Flt3L and changing the toll-like receptors (TLR) agonist to poly-ICLC -an optimal TLR agonist for the type of dendritic cells (DC) recruited by Flt3L. The vaccine is thus in 3 phases:
Full description
Lymphomas comprise the 5th most common cancer in the U.S. with approximately 80,000 new cases diagnosed in the U.S. each year. Low-grade B-cell lymphomas are the most prevalent subtype amongst these and are considered incurable with standard therapies. Chemotherapy and monoclonal antibody therapy induce temporary remissions, though disease generally recurs, becomes progressively more resistant to therapy and ultimately therapy-resistant. Standard therapies prolong survival, though there is no standard of care regarding when to initiate therapy (versus observation) or the optimal sequence of different therapies. Novel therapies are needed with distinct mechanisms and with greater tolerability profiles. Immunotherapy has a long precedent of being able to cure low-grade lymphomas with allogeneic transplant being curative in a proportion of chemo-refractory patients, though the morbidity of this procedure reduces its broader utilization.
Previously, we completed four trials combining local radiotherapy (a standard of care for these diseases) with intratumoral administration of TLR agonists - an approach we refer to as 'in situ vaccination' for patients with previously untreated or relapsed/refractory low-grade lymphoma. We demonstrated safety, induction of anti-tumor CD8 T cell responses and partial and complete remissions of patients' non-irradiated sites of disease.1, 2 The most recent trials compared previously untreated versus relapsed/refractory patients receiving the same therapy and observed superior responses in the former group, presumably due to immunosuppressive effects of prior treatments in the latter group. The in situ vaccine is premised on pre-clinical data showing this approach to be superior to systemic TLR agonist delivery3 and our clinical results reproduce this finding; in situ vaccination yields superior response rates as compared to trials of systemic TLR agonist therapy for lymphoma.4
This iteration of the in situ vaccine approach builds on our prior work in ways that should improve its efficacy, by making two changes to the prior approach:
Poly-ICLC has been safely administered to patients with lymphoma8 and -pre-clinically- has been shown to induce natural killer (NK) cell cytolytic activity and regression of lymphoma tumors.9-11 Over 600 healthy volunteers and cancer patients in 17 trials have been treated with comparable doses of poly-ICLC as that used here with excellent tolerability.
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Inclusion criteria
Biopsy-confirmed low-grade B-cell lymphoma or cutaneous T cell lymphoma; specifically, follicular grade 1, 2, or 3A, marginal zone or small lymphocytic lymphoma, or mycosis fungoides of any initial stage. Patients in cohort A must be relapsed/refractory after at least one prior systemic therapy and patients in cohort B must have had no prior systemic therapy.
Patients must have at least one site of disease that is accessible for intratumoral injection percutaneously (e.g. inguinal, axillary, cervical, or subcutaneous).
Tumor specimens must be available for immunological studies, either from a previous biopsy or a new biopsy obtained before the initiation Day 1 of the study.
Patients must have measurable disease other than the injection site or biopsy site, i.e. greater than 1.5 cm bi-dimensionally on standard computed tomography imaging.
ECOG Performance Status of 1 or better (corresponds to Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS) of ≥ 70)
Patients must be 18 years of age or older.
Adequate bone marrow function: WBC ≥ 2,000/μL; platelet count ≥ 75,000/mm3; ANC ≥ 1000/μL.
Adequate renal function: serum creatinine ≤ 2.0mg/dL.
Adequate hepatic function: bilirubin ≤ 1.5 mg/dL; SGOT/SGPT < 3 x upper limit of normal
Required wash out periods for prior therapy (for cohort B):
Patients of reproductive potential and their partners must agree to use an effective (> 90% reliability) form of contraception during the study and for 4 weeks following the last study drug administration.
Women of reproductive potential must have negative urine pregnancy test.
Life expectancy greater than 4 months.
Able to comply with the treatment schedule.
Ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document.
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21 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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