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Patients with advanced penile cancer have a poor prognosis (21% 2-year overall survival from moment of diagnosis) and high morbidity due to progressive locoregional disease.
Translational studies show high rates of infiltrating immune cells and PD-L1 positivity, suggesting that immunotherapy may be beneficial in this disease. Atezolizumab, targeting PD-L1, is active in several cancer types and is generally well-tolerated. This study will investigate whether atezolizumab can be combined with radiotherapy to control locoregional lymph node disease. Furthermore, the activity of atezolizumab in advanced penile cancer patients will be investigated.
Full description
Rationale Patients with advanced penile cancer have a poor prognosis (21% 2-year overall survival from moment of diagnosis) and high morbidity due to progressive locoregional disease.
Translational studies show high rates of infiltrating immune cells and PD-L1 positivity, suggesting that immunotherapy may be beneficial in this disease. Atezolizumab, targeting PD-L1, is active in several cancer types and is generally well-tolerated. This study will investigate whether atezolizumab can be combined with radiotherapy to control locoregional lymph node disease. Furthermore, the activity of atezolizumab in advanced penile cancer patients will be investigated.
Objectives:
Study design:
Single-center, nonrandomized, Phase 2 study with 2 treatment arms.
Study population:
Men, ≥18 years of age, with advanced inoperable penile cancer, N=32.
Intervention:
All patients will receive atezolizumab, 1200 mg, every 3 weeks, by IV infusion. Patients in group A will additionally receive 33 fractions of 1.5 (locoregional affected lymph nodes) and 1.8 Gy (tumor+margin) irradiation, concurrently with atezolizumab treatment.
Primary endpoint:
Progression-free survival at 1 year.
Main secondary endpoint:
2-year overall survival rate of the complete study population. Percentage of patients who complete the full course of radiotherapy in the radiotherapy/atezolizumab arm.
Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: Patients will be treated every 3 weeks with atezolizumab for one year or until loss of clinical benefit. Atezolizumab is generally well tolerated although immune-related toxicity does occur.
Toxicity of combining atezolizumab with a long course of radiotherapy is unknown and may result in increased toxicity. It is unknown whether atezolizumab will induce responses in patients with advanced penile cancer.
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32 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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