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About
This randomized pilot clinical trial studies vaccine therapy and sargramostim in treating patients with stage IV malignant melanoma. Vaccines made from melanoma peptides or antigens may help the body build an effective immune response to kill tumor cells. Colony-stimulating factors, such as sargramostim, increase the number of white blood cells and platelets found in bone marrow or peripheral blood. Giving vaccine therapy together with sargramostim may be an effective treatment for malignant melanoma
Full description
PRIMARY OBJECTIVES:
I. Determine the immunological effects of immunization protocols utilizing MART-1:27-35 (MART-1:27-35 peptide vaccine), tyrosinase (tyrosinase peptide) or gp-100 (gp100 antigen) peptides suspended in incomplete Freund's adjuvant (IFA) in the presence of two different concentrations of sargramostim (GM-CSF).
II. Define the safety and toxicity profile of an immunization protocol utilizing varying concentrations of MART-1:27-35, tyrosinase and gp-100 peptides suspended in IFA in the presence of two different concentrations of GM-CSF.
III. Collect preliminary data on therapeutic efficacy as it relates to parameters of immune function in patients with stage IV malignant melanoma.
OUTLINE: Patients are randomized to 1 of 3 treatment arms.
ARM I: Patients receive tyrosinase peptide, MART-1:27-35 peptide vaccine, and gp100 antigen admixed in incomplete Freund's adjuvant subcutaneously (SC) on day 1 of weeks 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, and 24.
ARM II: Patients receive tyrosinase peptide, MART-1:27-35 peptide vaccine, and gp100 antigen admixed in incomplete Freund's adjuvant SC and lower-dose sargramostim SC on day 1 of weeks 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, and 24.
ARM III: Patients receive tyrosinase peptide, MART-1:27-35 peptide vaccine, and gp100 antigen admixed in incomplete Freund's adjuvant SC and higher-dose sargramostim SC on day 1 of weeks 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, and 24.
In all arms, treatment may repeat every 3 months for up to 18 months in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.
After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up every 3 months for up to 3 years.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Uncontrolled or current infection
Prior immunization with differentiation antigen peptides
Known standard therapy for the patient's disease that is potentially curative or proven capable of extending life expectancy
Any of the following prior therapies:
Failure to fully recover from effects of prior chemotherapy regardless of interval since last treatment
New York Heart Association classification III or IV
Seizure disorder
Any of the following:
Other concurrent chemotherapy, immunotherapy, or radiotherapy
Active psychiatric disorder requiring medications (anti-psychotics)
Known central nervous system metastases or carcinomatous meningitis
History of other malignancy in last 5 years with the exception of basal cell or squamous cell carcinoma of the skin treated with local resection only (it is impossible to predict the effect of study treatment on other, potentially dormant malignant diseases)
Known immune deficiency (patients with known immune deficiencies will likely not be able to mount an immune response to the study vaccine)
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
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30 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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