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This is a phase 1a/1b, multicentre, open-label, non-randomized study of NG-641 in combination with nivolumab (or standard of care PD-1 inhibition) in patients with metastatic or advanced epithelial tumours.
The purpose is to characterize the safety and tolerability of NG-641 in combination with nivolumab in patients with metastatic or advanced epithelial tumours and to determine the recommended dose of NG-641 in combination with nivolumab for further development in patients with metastatic or advanced epithelial tumours
Full description
The Phase 1a part of the study is a dose escalation phase and is composed of two parts: Part A, which is investigating NG-641 administration (single cycle) by intravenous (IV) infusion in combination with up to 8 cycles of nivolumab; and Part B, which is investigating multicycle NG-641 administration (up to 8 cycles) by IV infusion in combination with up to 8 cycles of nivolumab. Both parts will include patients with metastatic or advanced tumours. Part B will open once a recommended starting dose of NG-641 is identified from the single-cycle dose escalation. Dose escalation in Part A may continue in parallel once Part B has opened.
The Phase 1b part of the study will further investigate the efficacy and safety of the selected dose regimen in up to three of the tumour types evaluated in phase 1b (tumour-specific Dose Expansion Cohorts A, B and C). A Simon 2-stage design will be used, with sample size calculations and futility criteria specific to each individual expansion cohort. Patients enrolled in Cohort A will have recurrent or metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (SCCHN) that is considered incurable by local therapies and has been recently treated with a first-line platinum-based chemotherapy regimen or platinum-based chemotherapy plus pembrolizumab.
Patients enrolled in Cohort A will be subdivided in to two groups according to whether they have received prior anti-PD-1 therapy (Cohort A1, chemotherapy regimen without pembrolizumab; Cohort A2, chemotherapy regimen with pembrolizumab) with each sub-cohort using a separate Simon 2-stage model. Patients in Cohort A2 who are already receiving pembrolizumab as standard of care at enrolment may continue this background treatment in combination with the recommended NG-641 dose; patients are permitted to switch to nivolumab at the Investigator's discretion. Cohorts B and C will be defined in a future protocol update that will be submitted for approval prior to these cohorts opening.
Following treatment, patients will be followed every 8 weeks until 12 months from first dose for disease status, overall survival, further cancer therapy and the best response and date of disease progression on further cancer therapy. These assessments may be performed by telephone calls or at routine visits to the hospital.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Phase 1a:
All patients:
Exclusion Criteria
Prior or planned allogeneic or autologous bone marrow or organ transplantation
Splenectomy
Active infections requiring antibiotics, physician monitoring or systemic therapy within 1 week of the anticipated first dose of study drug, or recurrent fevers (>38.0˚C) associated with a clinical diagnosis of active infection
Treatment with the antiviral agents: ribavirin, adefovir, lamivudine, cidofovir or paxlovid within 10 days prior to the first dose of study treatment; or pegylated interferon in the 4 weeks before the first dose of study treatment
Known history of hepatitis B infection or known active hepatitis C infection . Known history of HIV infection
Patients who have active, known or suspected autoimmune disease that has required systemic therapy in the past 2 years, are immunocompromised in the opinion of the Investigator, or are receiving long-term systemic immunosuppressive treatment
Treatment with any live, live-attenuated or COVID-19 vaccine in the 30 days before the first dose of NG-641 or nivolumab
Treatment with any other vaccine (including known non-live/live-attenuated and non-adenoviral COVID-19 vaccines) in the 7 days before the first dose of NG-641
History of prior Grade 3-4 acute kidney injury or other clinically significant renal impairment
History of clinically significant interstitial lung disease or non-infectious pneumonitis
Lymphangitic carcinomatosis
Infectious or inflammatory bowel disease in the 3 months before the first dose of study treatment
Any known CTCAE Grade ≥2 coagulation abnormality/coagulopathy
Any clinically significant cardiovascular, peripheral vascular, cerebrovascular, or thromboembolic event in the 6 months before the first dose of study treatment
Grade 3 or 4 gastrointestinal bleeding (or risk factors for gastrointestinal bleeding), haemoptysis, or any history of bleeding requiring an investigative procedure, transfusion or hospitalisation in the 6 months before the first dose of study treatment
Tumour location/extent considered by the Investigator to present a significant risk if tumour flare or necrosis were to occur
Known retinopathy, including retinal haemorrhages, cotton wool spots, papilloedema, optic neuropathy and retinal artery or vein obstruction
Active clinically severe depression
Use of the following prior therapies/treatments
All toxicities attributed to prior anti-cancer therapy (including radiation therapy) must have resolved to Grade 1 or baseline before the first dose of study treatment (see protocol for exceptions)
Known allergy or hypersensitivity (Grade ≥3) to NG-641 transgene, immune checkpoint inhibitor products or formulation, or other monoclonal antibodies
Known hypersensitivity to both cidofovir and valacyclovir
Discontinuation from prior treatment with an immune therapy due to a Grade ≥3 immune-related AE, or any history of life-threatening toxicity related to prior immune therapy except those that are unlikely to re-occur with standard countermeasures
Other prior malignancy active within the previous 3 year (see protocol for exceptions)
Symptomatic brain metastases or any leptomeningeal metastases that are symptomatic and/or requires treatment (see protocol for exceptions)
Any serious or uncontrolled medical disorder that, in the opinion of the Investigator or the Medical Monitor, may increase the risk associated with study participation or study treatment administration, impair the ability of the patient to receive protocol therapy or interfere with the interpretation of study results
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
30 participants in 1 patient group
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Akamis Bio
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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