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About
This clinical trial aims to evaluate the effectiveness of a new treatment approach for patients with stage III or IV melanoma that has spread to other parts of the body but can still be surgically removed. The study combines two treatments: LTX-315 and pembrolizumab.
Melanoma that has spread to other parts of the body can often be treated with surgery. Despite surgery, there is a high risk of the cancer coming back. Pembrolizumab, an immune checkpoint inhibitor, can reduce this risk when given after surgery. Recent studies have shown that giving pembrolizumab before surgery, along with post-surgery treatment, might be more effective than giving it only after surgery. However, many patients still experience cancer recurrence. Combining pembrolizumab with LTX-315, which triggers a different immune response, might improve the treatment's effectiveness and reduce the risk of cancer progression before surgery.
This is an open-label Phase II study, meaning both the researchers and participants will know which treatments are being given. The study will be conducted at a single center and will involve about 27 participants. They will receive LTX-315 and pembrolizumab before their planned surgery to see if this combination could be more effective than pembrolizumab alone.
The primary goal is to assess the tumors response to the neoadjuvant (pre-surgery) treatment, specifically looking at the rate of pathological complete response (pCR), where no cancer is detected in the removed tumor tissue.
Full description
This is a single arm, single center, open-label phase II study to assess the effect of neoadjuvant LTX-315 in combination with pembrolizumab in patients with clinically detectable and resectable stage III-IV melanoma.
Clinically detectable, fully resectable stage III or oligometastatic IV melanoma can be cured with surgery but has a very high risk of local or systemic recurrence. The risk of recurrence can be significantly reduced by adjuvant treatment with a PD-1 inhibitor. Due to the mode of action of PD-1 inhibitors (stimulating tumor reactive T cells), there is reason to believe that their effect is enhanced if given before definitive surgery and removal of tumor reactive T cells in the tumor microenvironment. Indeed, it was recently shown that the effect is greatly improved if three doses of pembrolizumab are administered prior to surgery (neoadjuvant), followed by 15 doses in the adjuvant setting, compared to giving 18 doses adjuvant.
Several studies have shown that pathologic complete response (pCR) after neoadjuvant treatment correlates with recurrence-free survival (RFS). The pCR rate neoadjuvant pembrolizumab is only modest (20%), and for 8% of the patients, disease progression in the neoadjuvant phase precludes the planned surgery.
LTX-315 is an oncolytic peptide generated from a host defense peptide and has both a direct killing activity and immunomodulatory properties. By inducing cell lysis and immunogenic cell death, LTX-315 can lead to increased T-cell infiltration, broadened repertoire of tumor antigens and increased diversity of T-cell clones, and thus has the potential to enhance the effect of pembrolizumab. Furthermore, the addition of LTX-315 to neoadjuvant pembrolizumab can lower risk of disease progression precluding surgery.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Participant must be 18 years of age inclusive, at the time of signing the informed consent.
Histologically confirmed, clinically detectable stage III-IV(M1a) melanoma, judged fully resectable and eligible for neoadjuvant treatment by consensus at a multidisciplinary tumor board. Patients with melanoma of cutaneous (including acral) or mucosal (including conjunctival) origin are eligible. Clinically detectable is defined as being apparent and measurable by radiological assessments or physical examination.
Measurable disease as per RECIST version 1.1 criteria.
Judged medically fit to undergo the planned surgery by the surgical team.
Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 0 or 1
Have at least one superficial cutaneous, subcutaneous or lymph node lesion available for injection with a maximum mean longest perpendicular diameter (LPD) of 3.0 cm.
Willing to undergo an additional tumor biopsy and submit biopsy and surgical specimens
Adequate organ function as defined below:
e. Serum bilirubin ≤ 1.5 x institutional upper limit of normal (ULN) f. AST and ALT ≤2.5 x ULN g. Albumin >30 g/L h. Serum creatinine ≤1.5 X ULN OR measured creatinine clearance (CL) >30 mL/min
Female participants are willing to use contraceptive measures as prescribed by the protocol from study visit 1 to 120 days after the last dose of study intervention. Women of childbearing potential must have a negative urine or serum pregnancy test within 72 hours of first study intervention.
Capable of giving signed informed consent as described in section 10.1 which includes compliance with the requirements and restrictions listed in the informed consent form (ICF) and in this protocol.
Exclusion criteria
dabrafenib + trametinib or radiotherapy), and regional therapy such as ECT or ILP is permitted (≥ 12 weeks prior to enrollment).
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
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27 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Henrik Jespersen, MD PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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