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This study is a dose-escalation, prospective clinical trial to assess the safety, tolerability, and preliminary therapeutic efficacy of engineered mitochondria expressing specific tumor antigen in patients with advanced solid tumors.
Full description
Advanced malignant solid tumors have limited treatment options and poor prognosis, which is a major health challenge worldwide. As a promising immunotherapy strategy, cancer vaccines use tumor-specific antigens or tumor-associated antigens to activate body-specific immune responses and effectively inhibit tumor growth and metastasis. Current research suggests that mitochondria are a form of archaeozoic proteus that is integrated into modern eukaryotes by symbiosis with anaerobic pre-eukaryotic (host) cells. Mitochondria are key mediators of innate and adaptive immune processes, and many mitochondrial components and metabolites (e.g., mitochondrial DNA, proteins, etc.) are released in response to cellular injury or stress as damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) to promote inflammatory responses. These DAMPs elicit an innate immune response by activating pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) such as TLRs and NOD-like receptors (NLRs). A mitochondrial engineering platform for the generation of antigen-rich mitochondria as a cancer vaccine has been successfully established. This study includes three dose cohorts and uses a "3+3" dose escalation design to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and preliminary anti-tumor activity of the engineered-mitochondria vaccine in patients with advanced solid tumors.
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Inclusion criteria
Patients aged 18 to 75 years at the time of acquisition informed consent form.
Patients with advanced malignant solid tumors such as non-small cell lung cancer or colorectal cancer, confirmed by histology or cytology, who are unable to receive or tolerate standard treatments, or who refuse standard treatments, exhibit positive expression of target antigens in the tumor tissue.
The presence of at least one measurable or evaluable lesion according to RECIST v1.1 criteria.
Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status score: 0-2.
Predicted survival time ≥3 months.
The main organs are functioning well and the following requirements are met within 7 days before receiving treatment:
① Hemoglobin (HGB) ≥80 g/L (no blood transfusion within 14 days); Absolute neutrophil count (ANC) >1.5×109/L; White blood cell count ≥3.0×109/L; Platelet count (PLT) ≥80×109/L;
② Total bilirubin ≤1.5× upper limit of normal value (ULN); Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) or aspartate aminotransferase (AST) ≤2.5×ULN; If there was liver metastasis, ALT or AST≤5×ULN;
③ Creatinine (SCr) ≤1.5×ULN or creatinine clearance (CRCI) estimated by Cockcroft-Gault formula ≥60 mL/min;
④ Prothrombin time (PT), international normalized ratio (INR) ≤1.5×ULN (unless anticoagulation with warfarin);
⑤ Cardiac function: left ventricular ejection fraction ≥50%. QTcF interval ≤450 ms.
Men of childbearing potential and women of childbearing age voluntarily use effective contraceptive methods (e.g., condoms, intrauterine devices, spermicides) from the time of signing the informed form until 6 months after the completion of vaccination, and contraceptive use is not allowed. Female cancer patients who have a negative pregnancy test and agree not to breastfeed during the study and for at least 18 months after receipt of the trial vaccine;
The washout period of previous anti-tumor therapy should be at least 4 weeks, and the washout period of molecular targeted drugs should be at least 5 half-lives. Palliative radiotherapy needs to have been completed for at least 2 weeks; Chest radiation therapy needed to have been completed for at least 3 months, and major surgery needed to have been completed with at least 4 weeks of recovery.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
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9 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Xingchen Peng, Ph.D
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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