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About
RATIONALE: Vaccines may make the body build an immune response that will kill tumor cells. Interleukin-2 may stimulate a person's white blood cells to kill melanoma cells.
PURPOSE: Randomized phase II trial to study the effectiveness of vaccine therapy with interleukin-2 in treating patients with metastatic melanoma.
Full description
OBJECTIVES:
OUTLINE: This is a randomized, multicenter study. Patients are stratified according to prior therapy (adjuvant interferon vs chemotherapy for advanced disease vs both vs none), ECOG performance status (0 vs 1), and number of organ sites involved (1 vs more than 1). Patients are randomized into 1 of 3 treatment arms. (Arm III closed to accrual as of 11/30/1998.)
Patients in each arm may receive up to a total of 3 courses of treatment.
Patients are followed until death.
PROJECTED ACCRUAL: Approximately 90 patients (25 patients for arms I and II and 40 patients for arm III [arm III closed to accrual as of 11/30/1998]) will be accrued for this study within 12-18 months.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS:
Histologically confirmed clearly progressive metastatic or unresectable melanoma
Must be HLA-A2.1 positive
Measurable disease
No active brain metastases, leptomeningeal disease, or seizure disorder
No ascites or pleural effusions
PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS:
Age:
Performance status:
Life expectancy:
Hematopoietic:
Hepatic:
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Pulmonary:
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PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY:
Biologic therapy:
Chemotherapy:
Endocrine therapy:
Radiotherapy:
Surgery:
Other:
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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