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Creating CAR T-cell therapies for T-cell malignancies
NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. – Preclinical research has revealed workarounds that may make chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy feasible for patients with T-cell malignancies.
Researchers have found that using allogeneic cells for CAR T-cell therapy can eliminate contamination by malignant T cells, and editing those allogeneic T cells to delete the target antigen and the T-cell receptor alpha chain (TRAC) can prevent fratricide and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD).
Additionally, an interleukin-7 molecule called NT-I7 has been shown to enhance CAR T-cell proliferation, differentiation, and tumor killing in a mouse model of a T-cell malignancy.
John F. DiPersio, MD, PhD, of Washington University in St. Louis, described this work in a presentation at the Acute Leukemia Forum of Hemedicus.
Obstacles to development
“The primary obstacle for targeting T-cell malignancies with a T cell is that all of the targets that are on the [malignant] T cells are also expressed on the normal T cells,” Dr. DiPersio said. “So when you put a CAR into a normal T cell, it just kills itself. It’s called fratricide.”
A second issue that has limited development is that the phenotype of the malignant T cell in the blood is similar to a normal T cell, so they can’t be separated, he explained.
“So if you were to do anything to a normal T cell, you would also be doing it, in theory, to the malignant T cell – in theory, making it resistant to therapy,” he said.
A third obstacle, which has been seen in patients with B-cell malignancies as well, is the inability to harvest enough T cells to generate effective CAR T-cell therapy.
And a fourth obstacle is that T cells from patients with malignancies may not function normally because they have been exposed to prior therapies.
Dr. DiPersio and his colleagues believe these obstacles can be overcome by creating CAR T-cell therapies using T cells derived from healthy donors or cord blood, using gene editing to remove the target antigen and TRAC, and using NT-I7 to enhance the efficacy of these universal, “off-the-shelf” CAR T cells.
The researchers have tested these theories, and achieved successes, in preclinical models. The team is now planning a clinical trial in patients at Washington University. Dr. DiPersio and his colleagues also created a company called WUGEN that will develop the universal CAR T-cell therapies if the initial proof-of-principle trial proves successful.
UCART7
One of the universal CAR T-cell therapies Dr. DiPersio and his colleagues have tested is UCART7, which targets CD7. Dr. DiPersio noted that CD7 is expressed on 98% of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemias (T-ALLs), 24% of acute myeloid leukemias, natural killer (NK) cells, and T cells.
The researchers created UCART7 by using CRISPR/Cas9 to delete CD7 and TRAC from allogeneic T cells and following this with lentiviral transduction with a third-generation CD7-CAR. The team found a way to delete both TRAC and CD7 in a single day with 95% efficiency, Dr. DiPersio noted.
“Knocking out CD7 doesn’t seem to have any impact on the expansion or trafficking of these T cells in vivo,” Dr. DiPersio said. “So we think that deleting that target in a normal T cell will not affect its overall ability to kill a target when we put a CAR into those T cells.”
In fact, the researchers’ experiments showed that UCART7 can kill T-ALL cells in vitro and target primary T-ALL in vivo without inducing GVHD (Leukemia. 2018 Sep;32[9]:1970-83.)
UCART2 and NT-I7
Dr. DiPersio and his colleagues have also tested UCART2, an allogeneic CAR T-cell therapy in which CD2 and TRAC are deleted. The therapy targets CD2 because this antigen is expressed on T-ALL and other T-cell and NK-cell malignancies. Experiments showed that UCART2 targets T-cell malignancies, including T-ALL and cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, in vitro.
The researchers also tested UCART2 in a mouse model of Sézary syndrome. In these experiments, UCART2 was combined with NT-I7.
NT-I7 enhanced the proliferation, persistence, and tumor killing ability of UCART2. Sézary mice that received UCART2 and NT-I7 had “virtually no tumor burden,” according to researchers, and survived longer than mice treated with UCART2 alone (Blood. 2018;132:340).
Dr. DiPersio noted that there was no cytokine release syndrome because these were immunodeficient mice. However, cytokine release syndrome may be a side effect of NT-I7 in patients as NT-I7 induces rapid expansion of CAR T cells.
Dr. DiPersio reported ownership and investment in WUGEN and Magenta Therapeutics. He also has relationships with Cellworks Group, Tioma Therapeutics, RiverVest Venture Partners, Bioline, Asterias Biotherapeutics, Amphivena Therapeutics, Bluebird Bio, Celgene, Incyte, NeoImuneTech, and MacroGenics.
The Acute Leukemia Forum is organized by Hemedicus, which is owned by the same company as this news organization.
NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. – Preclinical research has revealed workarounds that may make chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy feasible for patients with T-cell malignancies.
Researchers have found that using allogeneic cells for CAR T-cell therapy can eliminate contamination by malignant T cells, and editing those allogeneic T cells to delete the target antigen and the T-cell receptor alpha chain (TRAC) can prevent fratricide and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD).
Additionally, an interleukin-7 molecule called NT-I7 has been shown to enhance CAR T-cell proliferation, differentiation, and tumor killing in a mouse model of a T-cell malignancy.
John F. DiPersio, MD, PhD, of Washington University in St. Louis, described this work in a presentation at the Acute Leukemia Forum of Hemedicus.
Obstacles to development
“The primary obstacle for targeting T-cell malignancies with a T cell is that all of the targets that are on the [malignant] T cells are also expressed on the normal T cells,” Dr. DiPersio said. “So when you put a CAR into a normal T cell, it just kills itself. It’s called fratricide.”
A second issue that has limited development is that the phenotype of the malignant T cell in the blood is similar to a normal T cell, so they can’t be separated, he explained.
“So if you were to do anything to a normal T cell, you would also be doing it, in theory, to the malignant T cell – in theory, making it resistant to therapy,” he said.
A third obstacle, which has been seen in patients with B-cell malignancies as well, is the inability to harvest enough T cells to generate effective CAR T-cell therapy.
And a fourth obstacle is that T cells from patients with malignancies may not function normally because they have been exposed to prior therapies.
Dr. DiPersio and his colleagues believe these obstacles can be overcome by creating CAR T-cell therapies using T cells derived from healthy donors or cord blood, using gene editing to remove the target antigen and TRAC, and using NT-I7 to enhance the efficacy of these universal, “off-the-shelf” CAR T cells.
The researchers have tested these theories, and achieved successes, in preclinical models. The team is now planning a clinical trial in patients at Washington University. Dr. DiPersio and his colleagues also created a company called WUGEN that will develop the universal CAR T-cell therapies if the initial proof-of-principle trial proves successful.
UCART7
One of the universal CAR T-cell therapies Dr. DiPersio and his colleagues have tested is UCART7, which targets CD7. Dr. DiPersio noted that CD7 is expressed on 98% of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemias (T-ALLs), 24% of acute myeloid leukemias, natural killer (NK) cells, and T cells.
The researchers created UCART7 by using CRISPR/Cas9 to delete CD7 and TRAC from allogeneic T cells and following this with lentiviral transduction with a third-generation CD7-CAR. The team found a way to delete both TRAC and CD7 in a single day with 95% efficiency, Dr. DiPersio noted.
“Knocking out CD7 doesn’t seem to have any impact on the expansion or trafficking of these T cells in vivo,” Dr. DiPersio said. “So we think that deleting that target in a normal T cell will not affect its overall ability to kill a target when we put a CAR into those T cells.”
In fact, the researchers’ experiments showed that UCART7 can kill T-ALL cells in vitro and target primary T-ALL in vivo without inducing GVHD (Leukemia. 2018 Sep;32[9]:1970-83.)
UCART2 and NT-I7
Dr. DiPersio and his colleagues have also tested UCART2, an allogeneic CAR T-cell therapy in which CD2 and TRAC are deleted. The therapy targets CD2 because this antigen is expressed on T-ALL and other T-cell and NK-cell malignancies. Experiments showed that UCART2 targets T-cell malignancies, including T-ALL and cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, in vitro.
The researchers also tested UCART2 in a mouse model of Sézary syndrome. In these experiments, UCART2 was combined with NT-I7.
NT-I7 enhanced the proliferation, persistence, and tumor killing ability of UCART2. Sézary mice that received UCART2 and NT-I7 had “virtually no tumor burden,” according to researchers, and survived longer than mice treated with UCART2 alone (Blood. 2018;132:340).
Dr. DiPersio noted that there was no cytokine release syndrome because these were immunodeficient mice. However, cytokine release syndrome may be a side effect of NT-I7 in patients as NT-I7 induces rapid expansion of CAR T cells.
Dr. DiPersio reported ownership and investment in WUGEN and Magenta Therapeutics. He also has relationships with Cellworks Group, Tioma Therapeutics, RiverVest Venture Partners, Bioline, Asterias Biotherapeutics, Amphivena Therapeutics, Bluebird Bio, Celgene, Incyte, NeoImuneTech, and MacroGenics.
The Acute Leukemia Forum is organized by Hemedicus, which is owned by the same company as this news organization.
NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. – Preclinical research has revealed workarounds that may make chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy feasible for patients with T-cell malignancies.
Researchers have found that using allogeneic cells for CAR T-cell therapy can eliminate contamination by malignant T cells, and editing those allogeneic T cells to delete the target antigen and the T-cell receptor alpha chain (TRAC) can prevent fratricide and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD).
Additionally, an interleukin-7 molecule called NT-I7 has been shown to enhance CAR T-cell proliferation, differentiation, and tumor killing in a mouse model of a T-cell malignancy.
John F. DiPersio, MD, PhD, of Washington University in St. Louis, described this work in a presentation at the Acute Leukemia Forum of Hemedicus.
Obstacles to development
“The primary obstacle for targeting T-cell malignancies with a T cell is that all of the targets that are on the [malignant] T cells are also expressed on the normal T cells,” Dr. DiPersio said. “So when you put a CAR into a normal T cell, it just kills itself. It’s called fratricide.”
A second issue that has limited development is that the phenotype of the malignant T cell in the blood is similar to a normal T cell, so they can’t be separated, he explained.
“So if you were to do anything to a normal T cell, you would also be doing it, in theory, to the malignant T cell – in theory, making it resistant to therapy,” he said.
A third obstacle, which has been seen in patients with B-cell malignancies as well, is the inability to harvest enough T cells to generate effective CAR T-cell therapy.
And a fourth obstacle is that T cells from patients with malignancies may not function normally because they have been exposed to prior therapies.
Dr. DiPersio and his colleagues believe these obstacles can be overcome by creating CAR T-cell therapies using T cells derived from healthy donors or cord blood, using gene editing to remove the target antigen and TRAC, and using NT-I7 to enhance the efficacy of these universal, “off-the-shelf” CAR T cells.
The researchers have tested these theories, and achieved successes, in preclinical models. The team is now planning a clinical trial in patients at Washington University. Dr. DiPersio and his colleagues also created a company called WUGEN that will develop the universal CAR T-cell therapies if the initial proof-of-principle trial proves successful.
UCART7
One of the universal CAR T-cell therapies Dr. DiPersio and his colleagues have tested is UCART7, which targets CD7. Dr. DiPersio noted that CD7 is expressed on 98% of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemias (T-ALLs), 24% of acute myeloid leukemias, natural killer (NK) cells, and T cells.
The researchers created UCART7 by using CRISPR/Cas9 to delete CD7 and TRAC from allogeneic T cells and following this with lentiviral transduction with a third-generation CD7-CAR. The team found a way to delete both TRAC and CD7 in a single day with 95% efficiency, Dr. DiPersio noted.
“Knocking out CD7 doesn’t seem to have any impact on the expansion or trafficking of these T cells in vivo,” Dr. DiPersio said. “So we think that deleting that target in a normal T cell will not affect its overall ability to kill a target when we put a CAR into those T cells.”
In fact, the researchers’ experiments showed that UCART7 can kill T-ALL cells in vitro and target primary T-ALL in vivo without inducing GVHD (Leukemia. 2018 Sep;32[9]:1970-83.)
UCART2 and NT-I7
Dr. DiPersio and his colleagues have also tested UCART2, an allogeneic CAR T-cell therapy in which CD2 and TRAC are deleted. The therapy targets CD2 because this antigen is expressed on T-ALL and other T-cell and NK-cell malignancies. Experiments showed that UCART2 targets T-cell malignancies, including T-ALL and cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, in vitro.
The researchers also tested UCART2 in a mouse model of Sézary syndrome. In these experiments, UCART2 was combined with NT-I7.
NT-I7 enhanced the proliferation, persistence, and tumor killing ability of UCART2. Sézary mice that received UCART2 and NT-I7 had “virtually no tumor burden,” according to researchers, and survived longer than mice treated with UCART2 alone (Blood. 2018;132:340).
Dr. DiPersio noted that there was no cytokine release syndrome because these were immunodeficient mice. However, cytokine release syndrome may be a side effect of NT-I7 in patients as NT-I7 induces rapid expansion of CAR T cells.
Dr. DiPersio reported ownership and investment in WUGEN and Magenta Therapeutics. He also has relationships with Cellworks Group, Tioma Therapeutics, RiverVest Venture Partners, Bioline, Asterias Biotherapeutics, Amphivena Therapeutics, Bluebird Bio, Celgene, Incyte, NeoImuneTech, and MacroGenics.
The Acute Leukemia Forum is organized by Hemedicus, which is owned by the same company as this news organization.
EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM ALF 2019
Novel CAR T, anti-PD-1 combo shows promise in MPD
ATLANTA – Intrapleurally administered, mesothelin-targeted chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells combined with programmed death 1 (PD-1) inhibition showed CAR T-cell antitumor activity without toxicity in a phase 1 clinical trial of patients with malignant pleural disease.
The findings are encouraging, particularly given the aggressive nature of such tumors and the poor prognosis associated with mesothelin – a cell-surface antigen expressed on them, Prasad S. Adusumilli, MD, reported during a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research.
In 21 patients, including 19 with malignant pleural mesothelioma and 1 each with metastatic lung cancer and metastatic breast cancer, a single dose of a second-generation, CD28-costimulated mesothelin CAR T-cell therapy (iCasM28z) was administered intrapleurally either with or without cyclophosphamide preconditioning.
Antitumor activity, as evidenced by the presence of CAR T cells in the blood for several months, was noted in 13 patients, and the presence of the cells was associated with a reduction in a mesothelin-related peptide in the blood, as well as with evidence of tumor regression on imaging studies, said Dr. Adusumilli, deputy chief of the thoracic service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, and lead study author.
Intense clinical, laboratory, and radiological monitoring along with electrocardiography showed no evidence of toxicity.
“Most importantly, the neurotoxicity, serious cytokine release syndrome, and on-target off-target tumor toxicity that has been seen in other CAR T-cell trials, we did not notice in our trial,” he said.
Additionally, one patient successfully underwent curative-intent surgical resection 6 weeks after CAR T-cell infusion, followed by radiation therapy to the chest, said Dr. Adusumilli, who also is director of the mesothelioma program and head of solid tumor cell therapy at the at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cellular Therapeutic Center.
That patient is doing well at 20 months without further treatment, he noted.
Of a subset of 14 patients who received off-protocol anti-PD-1 checkpoint blockade once lack of toxicity was established for the CAR T-cell therapy, 2 achieved a complete metabolic response at 38 and 60 weeks following checkpoint blockade, 5 had a partial response, and 4 had stable disease.
The anti-PD-1 therapy was initiated in those patients based on prior preclinical data, showing that CAR T cells can become functionally exhausted in large tumors and that anti-PD-1 therapy can reactivate the exhausted cells and eradicate the tumors, he explained.
The findings are notable because malignant pleural disease from primary malignant pleural mesothelioma or secondary metastatic disease affects more than 150,000 patients a year in the United States alone, and effective therapies are lacking.
“[Our finding] strongly supports pursuing a CAR T-cell therapy combined with anti-PD-1 strategies is in solid tumors,” Dr. Adusumilli said, adding that such a trial is being planned for 2019, and another, with CAR T-cell intrinsic PD-1 dominant negative receptor (a decoy receptor) is planned for 2020.
Press briefing moderator Nilofer S. Azad, MD, of the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said the findings represent “potentially the most compelling CAR T data that we’ve ever seen in solid tumors at this point,” and noted that a “vast number of patients” could potentially benefit from the approach.
Dr. Adusumilli agreed, suggesting that, with a system of regional factories and distribution centers and development of “some clever strategies,” it is possible the technology and treatment approach could be scaled up to the level necessary to help increasing numbers of patients.
Dr. Adusumilli reported receiving federal grant support from the National Cancer Institute and Department of Defense; peer-reviewed grant support from the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation, Experimental Therapeutics Center, Baker Street Foundation, Batishwa Fellowship, Dallepezze Foundation, Derfner Foundation, Emerson Collective Foundation, and MSK Technology Development Fund; and research grant support from OSE Immunotherapeutics, ACEA Biosciences, and Atara Biotherapeutics. He also has a licensing/royalty agreement for Mesothelin CAR and PD-1 DNR (licensed to Atara Biotherapeutics).
SOURCE: Adusumilli PS et al. AACR 2019, Abstract CT036.
ATLANTA – Intrapleurally administered, mesothelin-targeted chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells combined with programmed death 1 (PD-1) inhibition showed CAR T-cell antitumor activity without toxicity in a phase 1 clinical trial of patients with malignant pleural disease.
The findings are encouraging, particularly given the aggressive nature of such tumors and the poor prognosis associated with mesothelin – a cell-surface antigen expressed on them, Prasad S. Adusumilli, MD, reported during a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research.
In 21 patients, including 19 with malignant pleural mesothelioma and 1 each with metastatic lung cancer and metastatic breast cancer, a single dose of a second-generation, CD28-costimulated mesothelin CAR T-cell therapy (iCasM28z) was administered intrapleurally either with or without cyclophosphamide preconditioning.
Antitumor activity, as evidenced by the presence of CAR T cells in the blood for several months, was noted in 13 patients, and the presence of the cells was associated with a reduction in a mesothelin-related peptide in the blood, as well as with evidence of tumor regression on imaging studies, said Dr. Adusumilli, deputy chief of the thoracic service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, and lead study author.
Intense clinical, laboratory, and radiological monitoring along with electrocardiography showed no evidence of toxicity.
“Most importantly, the neurotoxicity, serious cytokine release syndrome, and on-target off-target tumor toxicity that has been seen in other CAR T-cell trials, we did not notice in our trial,” he said.
Additionally, one patient successfully underwent curative-intent surgical resection 6 weeks after CAR T-cell infusion, followed by radiation therapy to the chest, said Dr. Adusumilli, who also is director of the mesothelioma program and head of solid tumor cell therapy at the at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cellular Therapeutic Center.
That patient is doing well at 20 months without further treatment, he noted.
Of a subset of 14 patients who received off-protocol anti-PD-1 checkpoint blockade once lack of toxicity was established for the CAR T-cell therapy, 2 achieved a complete metabolic response at 38 and 60 weeks following checkpoint blockade, 5 had a partial response, and 4 had stable disease.
The anti-PD-1 therapy was initiated in those patients based on prior preclinical data, showing that CAR T cells can become functionally exhausted in large tumors and that anti-PD-1 therapy can reactivate the exhausted cells and eradicate the tumors, he explained.
The findings are notable because malignant pleural disease from primary malignant pleural mesothelioma or secondary metastatic disease affects more than 150,000 patients a year in the United States alone, and effective therapies are lacking.
“[Our finding] strongly supports pursuing a CAR T-cell therapy combined with anti-PD-1 strategies is in solid tumors,” Dr. Adusumilli said, adding that such a trial is being planned for 2019, and another, with CAR T-cell intrinsic PD-1 dominant negative receptor (a decoy receptor) is planned for 2020.
Press briefing moderator Nilofer S. Azad, MD, of the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said the findings represent “potentially the most compelling CAR T data that we’ve ever seen in solid tumors at this point,” and noted that a “vast number of patients” could potentially benefit from the approach.
Dr. Adusumilli agreed, suggesting that, with a system of regional factories and distribution centers and development of “some clever strategies,” it is possible the technology and treatment approach could be scaled up to the level necessary to help increasing numbers of patients.
Dr. Adusumilli reported receiving federal grant support from the National Cancer Institute and Department of Defense; peer-reviewed grant support from the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation, Experimental Therapeutics Center, Baker Street Foundation, Batishwa Fellowship, Dallepezze Foundation, Derfner Foundation, Emerson Collective Foundation, and MSK Technology Development Fund; and research grant support from OSE Immunotherapeutics, ACEA Biosciences, and Atara Biotherapeutics. He also has a licensing/royalty agreement for Mesothelin CAR and PD-1 DNR (licensed to Atara Biotherapeutics).
SOURCE: Adusumilli PS et al. AACR 2019, Abstract CT036.
ATLANTA – Intrapleurally administered, mesothelin-targeted chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells combined with programmed death 1 (PD-1) inhibition showed CAR T-cell antitumor activity without toxicity in a phase 1 clinical trial of patients with malignant pleural disease.
The findings are encouraging, particularly given the aggressive nature of such tumors and the poor prognosis associated with mesothelin – a cell-surface antigen expressed on them, Prasad S. Adusumilli, MD, reported during a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research.
In 21 patients, including 19 with malignant pleural mesothelioma and 1 each with metastatic lung cancer and metastatic breast cancer, a single dose of a second-generation, CD28-costimulated mesothelin CAR T-cell therapy (iCasM28z) was administered intrapleurally either with or without cyclophosphamide preconditioning.
Antitumor activity, as evidenced by the presence of CAR T cells in the blood for several months, was noted in 13 patients, and the presence of the cells was associated with a reduction in a mesothelin-related peptide in the blood, as well as with evidence of tumor regression on imaging studies, said Dr. Adusumilli, deputy chief of the thoracic service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, and lead study author.
Intense clinical, laboratory, and radiological monitoring along with electrocardiography showed no evidence of toxicity.
“Most importantly, the neurotoxicity, serious cytokine release syndrome, and on-target off-target tumor toxicity that has been seen in other CAR T-cell trials, we did not notice in our trial,” he said.
Additionally, one patient successfully underwent curative-intent surgical resection 6 weeks after CAR T-cell infusion, followed by radiation therapy to the chest, said Dr. Adusumilli, who also is director of the mesothelioma program and head of solid tumor cell therapy at the at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cellular Therapeutic Center.
That patient is doing well at 20 months without further treatment, he noted.
Of a subset of 14 patients who received off-protocol anti-PD-1 checkpoint blockade once lack of toxicity was established for the CAR T-cell therapy, 2 achieved a complete metabolic response at 38 and 60 weeks following checkpoint blockade, 5 had a partial response, and 4 had stable disease.
The anti-PD-1 therapy was initiated in those patients based on prior preclinical data, showing that CAR T cells can become functionally exhausted in large tumors and that anti-PD-1 therapy can reactivate the exhausted cells and eradicate the tumors, he explained.
The findings are notable because malignant pleural disease from primary malignant pleural mesothelioma or secondary metastatic disease affects more than 150,000 patients a year in the United States alone, and effective therapies are lacking.
“[Our finding] strongly supports pursuing a CAR T-cell therapy combined with anti-PD-1 strategies is in solid tumors,” Dr. Adusumilli said, adding that such a trial is being planned for 2019, and another, with CAR T-cell intrinsic PD-1 dominant negative receptor (a decoy receptor) is planned for 2020.
Press briefing moderator Nilofer S. Azad, MD, of the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said the findings represent “potentially the most compelling CAR T data that we’ve ever seen in solid tumors at this point,” and noted that a “vast number of patients” could potentially benefit from the approach.
Dr. Adusumilli agreed, suggesting that, with a system of regional factories and distribution centers and development of “some clever strategies,” it is possible the technology and treatment approach could be scaled up to the level necessary to help increasing numbers of patients.
Dr. Adusumilli reported receiving federal grant support from the National Cancer Institute and Department of Defense; peer-reviewed grant support from the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation, Experimental Therapeutics Center, Baker Street Foundation, Batishwa Fellowship, Dallepezze Foundation, Derfner Foundation, Emerson Collective Foundation, and MSK Technology Development Fund; and research grant support from OSE Immunotherapeutics, ACEA Biosciences, and Atara Biotherapeutics. He also has a licensing/royalty agreement for Mesothelin CAR and PD-1 DNR (licensed to Atara Biotherapeutics).
SOURCE: Adusumilli PS et al. AACR 2019, Abstract CT036.
REPORTING FROM AACR 2019
Immunotherapy overtaking breast cancer treatment landscape
Combination treatment strategies that include immunotherapeutic agents are expected to become the future of breast cancer treatment, according to a review.
“There is tremendous interest in using immunotherapy to treat breast cancer, as evidenced by the more than 290 clinical trials ongoing,” wrote Sylvia Adams, MD, MS, of New York University, along with her colleagues. The report is in JAMA Oncology.
“It is anticipated that combination therapy strategies will be the way forward for immunotherapy in breast cancer, with an improved understanding of tumor, microenvironment, and host factors informing treatment combination decisions, they said.
Dr. Adams and her colleagues searched major databases for clinical trials investigating the use of immunotherapy in both early-stage and metastatic breast cancer.
After the search, the team found that immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) agents were the most studied type of immunotherapy in breast cancer today.
In addition, Dr. Adams and her colleagues reported that when UCB agents were used as monotherapy in patients with breast cancer, objective responses have been seen, especially when given in the initial stages of treatment. “For responding patients, those responses are durable,” they added.
Recent findings have indicated that combining immune checkpoint blockade agents with chemotherapy may be useful in early breast cancer as neoadjuvant therapy.
“Combination trials were more common than single-agent studies, with the most commonly combined modalities being chemotherapy or targeted therapy,” the researchers wrote.
The review is limited by the rapid advancement of the current treatment landscape. As a result, additional data may now be available beyond the date of publication.
“Thoughtful study design incorporating appropriate end points and correlative studies will be critical in identifying optimal strategies for enhancing the immune response against breast tumors,” they concluded.
No funding sources were reported. The authors reported financial affiliations with Amgen, Celgene, Genentech, Eli Lilly, Ipsen, Novartis, Pfizer, and several others.
SOURCE: Adams S et al. JAMA Oncol. 2019 Apr 11. doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2018.7147.
Combination treatment strategies that include immunotherapeutic agents are expected to become the future of breast cancer treatment, according to a review.
“There is tremendous interest in using immunotherapy to treat breast cancer, as evidenced by the more than 290 clinical trials ongoing,” wrote Sylvia Adams, MD, MS, of New York University, along with her colleagues. The report is in JAMA Oncology.
“It is anticipated that combination therapy strategies will be the way forward for immunotherapy in breast cancer, with an improved understanding of tumor, microenvironment, and host factors informing treatment combination decisions, they said.
Dr. Adams and her colleagues searched major databases for clinical trials investigating the use of immunotherapy in both early-stage and metastatic breast cancer.
After the search, the team found that immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) agents were the most studied type of immunotherapy in breast cancer today.
In addition, Dr. Adams and her colleagues reported that when UCB agents were used as monotherapy in patients with breast cancer, objective responses have been seen, especially when given in the initial stages of treatment. “For responding patients, those responses are durable,” they added.
Recent findings have indicated that combining immune checkpoint blockade agents with chemotherapy may be useful in early breast cancer as neoadjuvant therapy.
“Combination trials were more common than single-agent studies, with the most commonly combined modalities being chemotherapy or targeted therapy,” the researchers wrote.
The review is limited by the rapid advancement of the current treatment landscape. As a result, additional data may now be available beyond the date of publication.
“Thoughtful study design incorporating appropriate end points and correlative studies will be critical in identifying optimal strategies for enhancing the immune response against breast tumors,” they concluded.
No funding sources were reported. The authors reported financial affiliations with Amgen, Celgene, Genentech, Eli Lilly, Ipsen, Novartis, Pfizer, and several others.
SOURCE: Adams S et al. JAMA Oncol. 2019 Apr 11. doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2018.7147.
Combination treatment strategies that include immunotherapeutic agents are expected to become the future of breast cancer treatment, according to a review.
“There is tremendous interest in using immunotherapy to treat breast cancer, as evidenced by the more than 290 clinical trials ongoing,” wrote Sylvia Adams, MD, MS, of New York University, along with her colleagues. The report is in JAMA Oncology.
“It is anticipated that combination therapy strategies will be the way forward for immunotherapy in breast cancer, with an improved understanding of tumor, microenvironment, and host factors informing treatment combination decisions, they said.
Dr. Adams and her colleagues searched major databases for clinical trials investigating the use of immunotherapy in both early-stage and metastatic breast cancer.
After the search, the team found that immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) agents were the most studied type of immunotherapy in breast cancer today.
In addition, Dr. Adams and her colleagues reported that when UCB agents were used as monotherapy in patients with breast cancer, objective responses have been seen, especially when given in the initial stages of treatment. “For responding patients, those responses are durable,” they added.
Recent findings have indicated that combining immune checkpoint blockade agents with chemotherapy may be useful in early breast cancer as neoadjuvant therapy.
“Combination trials were more common than single-agent studies, with the most commonly combined modalities being chemotherapy or targeted therapy,” the researchers wrote.
The review is limited by the rapid advancement of the current treatment landscape. As a result, additional data may now be available beyond the date of publication.
“Thoughtful study design incorporating appropriate end points and correlative studies will be critical in identifying optimal strategies for enhancing the immune response against breast tumors,” they concluded.
No funding sources were reported. The authors reported financial affiliations with Amgen, Celgene, Genentech, Eli Lilly, Ipsen, Novartis, Pfizer, and several others.
SOURCE: Adams S et al. JAMA Oncol. 2019 Apr 11. doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2018.7147.
FROM JAMA ONCOLOGY
Pooled KEYNOTE data support pembro for elderly patients with NSCLC
GENEVA – Pembrolizumab monotherapy is as safe and effective in elderly patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) as it is younger patients, according to investigators.
They reached this conclusion after analyzing pooled data from 264 patients 75 years or older involved in the KEYNOTE-010, KEYNOTE-024, and KEYNOTE-042 phase 3 trials, reported lead author Kaname Nosaki, MD, of the National Hospital Organization Kyushu Cancer Center in Fukuoka, Japan, and his colleagues.
“Approximately 70% of newly-diagnosed NSCLC cases occur in the elderly, and more than half are locally advanced or metastatic,” the investigators noted in their abstract. Despite this, patients aged 75 years or older are underrepresented in clinical trials, Dr. Nosaki said during a presentation at the European Lung Cancer Conference.
All patients in the three KEYNOTE trials had PD-L1 positive NSCLC, with variations between studies with respect to PD-L1 tumor proportion score (TPS) and dosing regimen. While KEYNOTE-010 and KEYNOTE-042 involved patients with a TPS of at least 1%, KEYNOTE-024 raised the minimum TPS threshold to 50%. KEYNOTE-010 pembrolizumab dose was set at 2 mg/kg or 10 mg/kg, compared with the other two studies, which set a consistent dose of the checkpoint inhibitor at 200 mg.
As with younger patients, higher TPS expression generally predicted better outcomes. Independent of treatment line, elderly patients with a TPS of at least 50% had a hazard ratio of 0.40 in favor of pembrolizumab over chemotherapy, compared with all PD-L1-positive elderly patients, who had a hazard ratio of 0.76.
Generally, adverse events were comparable between age groups, with 68% of elderly patients experiencing at least one treatment-related adverse event, compared with 65% of younger patients. Grade 3 or 4 adverse events were slightly more common among elderly patients than younger patients (23% vs. 16%), with a mild concomitant increase in adverse event–related treatment discontinuations (11% vs. 7%). The rate of immune-mediated adverse events and infusion reactions, however, held steady regardless of age group, occurring in one out of four patients (25%). In contrast with these similarities, almost all elderly patients receiving chemotherapy (94%) had adverse events, compared with two out of three elderly patients receiving pembrolizumab. Rates of grade 3 or 4 adverse events also favored pembrolizumab over chemotherapy (23% vs. 59%).
“These data support the use of pembrolizumab monotherapy in elderly patients more than 75 years old with advanced PD-L1-expressing NSCLC,” Dr. Nosaki concluded.
Invited discussant Sanjay Popat, PhD, of Imperial College London, described the knowledge gap addressed by this study. “If we look at U.S. statistics, we see that lung cancer is the leading cause of death for patients above the age of 80, both for males and females,” Dr. Popat said at the meeting, presented by the European Society for Medical Oncology. “The real question is should this group of patients be getting any form of checkpoint inhibitors at all, and if so, what is the benefit to risk ratio?
“Our patients are getting older, we’re all living slightly longer, and the burden of geriatric oncology is predicted to rise quite markedly with age, so it’s important to get a good feel for how we should be managing our senior population,” he added.
According to Dr. Popat, elderly patients naturally undergo immune senescence, meaning the immune system deteriorates with age, and this phenomenon could theoretically mitigate efficacy of immunotherapies; however, previous studies have not found decreased efficacy among elderly patients. Still, some “so-called elderly population subsets we’ve been analyzing are actually around the median age [of diagnosis with NSCLC],” Dr. Popat said, noting that among these studies, those with wider age ranges offer more reliable data.
“Today we looked at the novel cutoff, this 75-year group cutoff, which I very much welcome,” Dr. Popat said, “because this much more reflects what we see in routine clinical care.”
Regarding the results, Dr. Popat suggested that chemotherapy leads to an “excess of mortality” among elderly patients, “likely due to toxicities,” thereby explaining part of the relative advantage provided by pembrolizumab. Considering these findings in addition to previous experiences with pembrolizumab in the elderly, Dr. Popat said that “if you choose your patient population well, fit patients well enough to go to a trial, they don’t have an excess of toxicities regardless of their age.”
Taken as a whole, the present analysis supports the routine use of pembrolizumab in fit, elderly patients, Dr. Popat said.
The study was funded by MSD. The investigators reported financial relationships with AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly, Taiho, Chugai, and others.
SOURCE: Nosaki et al. ELCC 2019. Abstract 103O_PR.
GENEVA – Pembrolizumab monotherapy is as safe and effective in elderly patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) as it is younger patients, according to investigators.
They reached this conclusion after analyzing pooled data from 264 patients 75 years or older involved in the KEYNOTE-010, KEYNOTE-024, and KEYNOTE-042 phase 3 trials, reported lead author Kaname Nosaki, MD, of the National Hospital Organization Kyushu Cancer Center in Fukuoka, Japan, and his colleagues.
“Approximately 70% of newly-diagnosed NSCLC cases occur in the elderly, and more than half are locally advanced or metastatic,” the investigators noted in their abstract. Despite this, patients aged 75 years or older are underrepresented in clinical trials, Dr. Nosaki said during a presentation at the European Lung Cancer Conference.
All patients in the three KEYNOTE trials had PD-L1 positive NSCLC, with variations between studies with respect to PD-L1 tumor proportion score (TPS) and dosing regimen. While KEYNOTE-010 and KEYNOTE-042 involved patients with a TPS of at least 1%, KEYNOTE-024 raised the minimum TPS threshold to 50%. KEYNOTE-010 pembrolizumab dose was set at 2 mg/kg or 10 mg/kg, compared with the other two studies, which set a consistent dose of the checkpoint inhibitor at 200 mg.
As with younger patients, higher TPS expression generally predicted better outcomes. Independent of treatment line, elderly patients with a TPS of at least 50% had a hazard ratio of 0.40 in favor of pembrolizumab over chemotherapy, compared with all PD-L1-positive elderly patients, who had a hazard ratio of 0.76.
Generally, adverse events were comparable between age groups, with 68% of elderly patients experiencing at least one treatment-related adverse event, compared with 65% of younger patients. Grade 3 or 4 adverse events were slightly more common among elderly patients than younger patients (23% vs. 16%), with a mild concomitant increase in adverse event–related treatment discontinuations (11% vs. 7%). The rate of immune-mediated adverse events and infusion reactions, however, held steady regardless of age group, occurring in one out of four patients (25%). In contrast with these similarities, almost all elderly patients receiving chemotherapy (94%) had adverse events, compared with two out of three elderly patients receiving pembrolizumab. Rates of grade 3 or 4 adverse events also favored pembrolizumab over chemotherapy (23% vs. 59%).
“These data support the use of pembrolizumab monotherapy in elderly patients more than 75 years old with advanced PD-L1-expressing NSCLC,” Dr. Nosaki concluded.
Invited discussant Sanjay Popat, PhD, of Imperial College London, described the knowledge gap addressed by this study. “If we look at U.S. statistics, we see that lung cancer is the leading cause of death for patients above the age of 80, both for males and females,” Dr. Popat said at the meeting, presented by the European Society for Medical Oncology. “The real question is should this group of patients be getting any form of checkpoint inhibitors at all, and if so, what is the benefit to risk ratio?
“Our patients are getting older, we’re all living slightly longer, and the burden of geriatric oncology is predicted to rise quite markedly with age, so it’s important to get a good feel for how we should be managing our senior population,” he added.
According to Dr. Popat, elderly patients naturally undergo immune senescence, meaning the immune system deteriorates with age, and this phenomenon could theoretically mitigate efficacy of immunotherapies; however, previous studies have not found decreased efficacy among elderly patients. Still, some “so-called elderly population subsets we’ve been analyzing are actually around the median age [of diagnosis with NSCLC],” Dr. Popat said, noting that among these studies, those with wider age ranges offer more reliable data.
“Today we looked at the novel cutoff, this 75-year group cutoff, which I very much welcome,” Dr. Popat said, “because this much more reflects what we see in routine clinical care.”
Regarding the results, Dr. Popat suggested that chemotherapy leads to an “excess of mortality” among elderly patients, “likely due to toxicities,” thereby explaining part of the relative advantage provided by pembrolizumab. Considering these findings in addition to previous experiences with pembrolizumab in the elderly, Dr. Popat said that “if you choose your patient population well, fit patients well enough to go to a trial, they don’t have an excess of toxicities regardless of their age.”
Taken as a whole, the present analysis supports the routine use of pembrolizumab in fit, elderly patients, Dr. Popat said.
The study was funded by MSD. The investigators reported financial relationships with AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly, Taiho, Chugai, and others.
SOURCE: Nosaki et al. ELCC 2019. Abstract 103O_PR.
GENEVA – Pembrolizumab monotherapy is as safe and effective in elderly patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) as it is younger patients, according to investigators.
They reached this conclusion after analyzing pooled data from 264 patients 75 years or older involved in the KEYNOTE-010, KEYNOTE-024, and KEYNOTE-042 phase 3 trials, reported lead author Kaname Nosaki, MD, of the National Hospital Organization Kyushu Cancer Center in Fukuoka, Japan, and his colleagues.
“Approximately 70% of newly-diagnosed NSCLC cases occur in the elderly, and more than half are locally advanced or metastatic,” the investigators noted in their abstract. Despite this, patients aged 75 years or older are underrepresented in clinical trials, Dr. Nosaki said during a presentation at the European Lung Cancer Conference.
All patients in the three KEYNOTE trials had PD-L1 positive NSCLC, with variations between studies with respect to PD-L1 tumor proportion score (TPS) and dosing regimen. While KEYNOTE-010 and KEYNOTE-042 involved patients with a TPS of at least 1%, KEYNOTE-024 raised the minimum TPS threshold to 50%. KEYNOTE-010 pembrolizumab dose was set at 2 mg/kg or 10 mg/kg, compared with the other two studies, which set a consistent dose of the checkpoint inhibitor at 200 mg.
As with younger patients, higher TPS expression generally predicted better outcomes. Independent of treatment line, elderly patients with a TPS of at least 50% had a hazard ratio of 0.40 in favor of pembrolizumab over chemotherapy, compared with all PD-L1-positive elderly patients, who had a hazard ratio of 0.76.
Generally, adverse events were comparable between age groups, with 68% of elderly patients experiencing at least one treatment-related adverse event, compared with 65% of younger patients. Grade 3 or 4 adverse events were slightly more common among elderly patients than younger patients (23% vs. 16%), with a mild concomitant increase in adverse event–related treatment discontinuations (11% vs. 7%). The rate of immune-mediated adverse events and infusion reactions, however, held steady regardless of age group, occurring in one out of four patients (25%). In contrast with these similarities, almost all elderly patients receiving chemotherapy (94%) had adverse events, compared with two out of three elderly patients receiving pembrolizumab. Rates of grade 3 or 4 adverse events also favored pembrolizumab over chemotherapy (23% vs. 59%).
“These data support the use of pembrolizumab monotherapy in elderly patients more than 75 years old with advanced PD-L1-expressing NSCLC,” Dr. Nosaki concluded.
Invited discussant Sanjay Popat, PhD, of Imperial College London, described the knowledge gap addressed by this study. “If we look at U.S. statistics, we see that lung cancer is the leading cause of death for patients above the age of 80, both for males and females,” Dr. Popat said at the meeting, presented by the European Society for Medical Oncology. “The real question is should this group of patients be getting any form of checkpoint inhibitors at all, and if so, what is the benefit to risk ratio?
“Our patients are getting older, we’re all living slightly longer, and the burden of geriatric oncology is predicted to rise quite markedly with age, so it’s important to get a good feel for how we should be managing our senior population,” he added.
According to Dr. Popat, elderly patients naturally undergo immune senescence, meaning the immune system deteriorates with age, and this phenomenon could theoretically mitigate efficacy of immunotherapies; however, previous studies have not found decreased efficacy among elderly patients. Still, some “so-called elderly population subsets we’ve been analyzing are actually around the median age [of diagnosis with NSCLC],” Dr. Popat said, noting that among these studies, those with wider age ranges offer more reliable data.
“Today we looked at the novel cutoff, this 75-year group cutoff, which I very much welcome,” Dr. Popat said, “because this much more reflects what we see in routine clinical care.”
Regarding the results, Dr. Popat suggested that chemotherapy leads to an “excess of mortality” among elderly patients, “likely due to toxicities,” thereby explaining part of the relative advantage provided by pembrolizumab. Considering these findings in addition to previous experiences with pembrolizumab in the elderly, Dr. Popat said that “if you choose your patient population well, fit patients well enough to go to a trial, they don’t have an excess of toxicities regardless of their age.”
Taken as a whole, the present analysis supports the routine use of pembrolizumab in fit, elderly patients, Dr. Popat said.
The study was funded by MSD. The investigators reported financial relationships with AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly, Taiho, Chugai, and others.
SOURCE: Nosaki et al. ELCC 2019. Abstract 103O_PR.
REPORTING FROM ELCC 2019
FDA approves pembrolizumab for first-line stage III NSCLC
The
who are not candidates for surgical resection or definitive chemoradiation, and for stage IV NSCLC.Patients’ tumors must express programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) as determined by an FDA-approved test (tumor proportion score ≥1%) and have no epidermal growth factor receptor or anaplastic lymphoma kinase mutations.
The checkpoint inhibitor was previously approved as a single agent for the first-line treatment of patients with metastatic disease with PD-L1 expression at a higher level (TPS ≥50%), the FDA said in a press statement.
Approval was based on statistically significant overall survival improvement with pembrolizumab, compared with investigator’s choice of a carboplatin-containing regimen with either pemetrexed or paclitaxel in KEYNOTE‑042. The trial enrolled 1,274 patients with stage III or IV NSCLC who had not received prior systemic treatment for metastatic NSCLC and whose tumors expressed PD-L1 (TPS ≥1%).
Overall survival was improved in all three subgroups for pembrolizumab, compared with chemotherapy: in the TPS ≥50% subgroup, the TPS ≥20% subgroup, and the overall population (TPS ≥1%). The median overall survival in the TPS ≥1% population was 16.7 for pembrolizumab and 12.1 months for the chemotherapy arms (hazard ratio, 0.81; 95% confidence interval, 0.71-0.93; P = .0036). For the TPS ≥50% subgroup, the estimated median overall survival was 20 months for pembrolizumab and 12.2 months for the chemotherapy arm (HR, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.56-0.85; P = .0006).
The most common adverse reactions reported for patients who received pembrolizumab included fatigue, decreased appetite, dyspnea, cough, rash, constipation, diarrhea, nausea, hypothyroidism, pneumonia, pyrexia, and weight loss, the FDA said.
The recommended dose for NSCLC is 200 mg as an IV infusion over 30 minutes every 3 weeks.
The
who are not candidates for surgical resection or definitive chemoradiation, and for stage IV NSCLC.Patients’ tumors must express programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) as determined by an FDA-approved test (tumor proportion score ≥1%) and have no epidermal growth factor receptor or anaplastic lymphoma kinase mutations.
The checkpoint inhibitor was previously approved as a single agent for the first-line treatment of patients with metastatic disease with PD-L1 expression at a higher level (TPS ≥50%), the FDA said in a press statement.
Approval was based on statistically significant overall survival improvement with pembrolizumab, compared with investigator’s choice of a carboplatin-containing regimen with either pemetrexed or paclitaxel in KEYNOTE‑042. The trial enrolled 1,274 patients with stage III or IV NSCLC who had not received prior systemic treatment for metastatic NSCLC and whose tumors expressed PD-L1 (TPS ≥1%).
Overall survival was improved in all three subgroups for pembrolizumab, compared with chemotherapy: in the TPS ≥50% subgroup, the TPS ≥20% subgroup, and the overall population (TPS ≥1%). The median overall survival in the TPS ≥1% population was 16.7 for pembrolizumab and 12.1 months for the chemotherapy arms (hazard ratio, 0.81; 95% confidence interval, 0.71-0.93; P = .0036). For the TPS ≥50% subgroup, the estimated median overall survival was 20 months for pembrolizumab and 12.2 months for the chemotherapy arm (HR, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.56-0.85; P = .0006).
The most common adverse reactions reported for patients who received pembrolizumab included fatigue, decreased appetite, dyspnea, cough, rash, constipation, diarrhea, nausea, hypothyroidism, pneumonia, pyrexia, and weight loss, the FDA said.
The recommended dose for NSCLC is 200 mg as an IV infusion over 30 minutes every 3 weeks.
The
who are not candidates for surgical resection or definitive chemoradiation, and for stage IV NSCLC.Patients’ tumors must express programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) as determined by an FDA-approved test (tumor proportion score ≥1%) and have no epidermal growth factor receptor or anaplastic lymphoma kinase mutations.
The checkpoint inhibitor was previously approved as a single agent for the first-line treatment of patients with metastatic disease with PD-L1 expression at a higher level (TPS ≥50%), the FDA said in a press statement.
Approval was based on statistically significant overall survival improvement with pembrolizumab, compared with investigator’s choice of a carboplatin-containing regimen with either pemetrexed or paclitaxel in KEYNOTE‑042. The trial enrolled 1,274 patients with stage III or IV NSCLC who had not received prior systemic treatment for metastatic NSCLC and whose tumors expressed PD-L1 (TPS ≥1%).
Overall survival was improved in all three subgroups for pembrolizumab, compared with chemotherapy: in the TPS ≥50% subgroup, the TPS ≥20% subgroup, and the overall population (TPS ≥1%). The median overall survival in the TPS ≥1% population was 16.7 for pembrolizumab and 12.1 months for the chemotherapy arms (hazard ratio, 0.81; 95% confidence interval, 0.71-0.93; P = .0036). For the TPS ≥50% subgroup, the estimated median overall survival was 20 months for pembrolizumab and 12.2 months for the chemotherapy arm (HR, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.56-0.85; P = .0006).
The most common adverse reactions reported for patients who received pembrolizumab included fatigue, decreased appetite, dyspnea, cough, rash, constipation, diarrhea, nausea, hypothyroidism, pneumonia, pyrexia, and weight loss, the FDA said.
The recommended dose for NSCLC is 200 mg as an IV infusion over 30 minutes every 3 weeks.
Dr. Louis Weiner: AACR presentations highlight new “transformative strategies”
ATLANTA – Several studies featured during a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research highlight the types of “transformative strategies” currently being developed and implemented, according to Louis Weiner, MD.
“Had this been the AACR [meeting] 20 years ago ... each one of them would have been a main plenary presentation and would have been the talk of the meeting,” Dr. Weiner, director of the Georgetown Lombardi Cancer Center at Georgetown University, Washington, and press briefing moderator, said of the findings.
While they are well accepted as being high quality presentations of great value, they don’t cause the same amount of stir, he said, adding: “I wouldn’t say we’re jaded, but we’ve come to the point where we almost expect great results at these meetings, and isn’t that wonderful?”
In this video interview he discussed the findings of two of the studies, including the phase 2 UNITY-NHL study and a preclinical Lynch syndrome mouse model used to develop a potential cancer preventive vaccine.
The Lynch syndrome data “suggest the strong possibility that we might be able to immunize people and combine that treatment with standard nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents such as naproxen to delay or reduce the impact of Lynch syndrome.”
“This set of findings ... opens the door to investigators in many different areas of cancer research to explore whether or not there are common frameshift mutations that might create novel neoantigens that we can go after with vaccines – be they for therapeutic benefit or for prevention,” he said.
The UNITY-NHL study, which showed that umbralisib is active and well tolerated as single-agent therapy in patients with relapsed or refractory marginal zone lymphoma, suggests “it’s quite possible that [the phosphoinositide 3-kinase delta inhibitor] is going to become a very important element in the treatment of patients with marginal zone lymphomas, and obviously it can be then used in earlier stages of diseases since it’s well tolerated, and it may well have useful activity in other B-cell malignancies,” he said.
Dr. Weiner reported having no relevant disclosures.
ATLANTA – Several studies featured during a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research highlight the types of “transformative strategies” currently being developed and implemented, according to Louis Weiner, MD.
“Had this been the AACR [meeting] 20 years ago ... each one of them would have been a main plenary presentation and would have been the talk of the meeting,” Dr. Weiner, director of the Georgetown Lombardi Cancer Center at Georgetown University, Washington, and press briefing moderator, said of the findings.
While they are well accepted as being high quality presentations of great value, they don’t cause the same amount of stir, he said, adding: “I wouldn’t say we’re jaded, but we’ve come to the point where we almost expect great results at these meetings, and isn’t that wonderful?”
In this video interview he discussed the findings of two of the studies, including the phase 2 UNITY-NHL study and a preclinical Lynch syndrome mouse model used to develop a potential cancer preventive vaccine.
The Lynch syndrome data “suggest the strong possibility that we might be able to immunize people and combine that treatment with standard nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents such as naproxen to delay or reduce the impact of Lynch syndrome.”
“This set of findings ... opens the door to investigators in many different areas of cancer research to explore whether or not there are common frameshift mutations that might create novel neoantigens that we can go after with vaccines – be they for therapeutic benefit or for prevention,” he said.
The UNITY-NHL study, which showed that umbralisib is active and well tolerated as single-agent therapy in patients with relapsed or refractory marginal zone lymphoma, suggests “it’s quite possible that [the phosphoinositide 3-kinase delta inhibitor] is going to become a very important element in the treatment of patients with marginal zone lymphomas, and obviously it can be then used in earlier stages of diseases since it’s well tolerated, and it may well have useful activity in other B-cell malignancies,” he said.
Dr. Weiner reported having no relevant disclosures.
ATLANTA – Several studies featured during a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research highlight the types of “transformative strategies” currently being developed and implemented, according to Louis Weiner, MD.
“Had this been the AACR [meeting] 20 years ago ... each one of them would have been a main plenary presentation and would have been the talk of the meeting,” Dr. Weiner, director of the Georgetown Lombardi Cancer Center at Georgetown University, Washington, and press briefing moderator, said of the findings.
While they are well accepted as being high quality presentations of great value, they don’t cause the same amount of stir, he said, adding: “I wouldn’t say we’re jaded, but we’ve come to the point where we almost expect great results at these meetings, and isn’t that wonderful?”
In this video interview he discussed the findings of two of the studies, including the phase 2 UNITY-NHL study and a preclinical Lynch syndrome mouse model used to develop a potential cancer preventive vaccine.
The Lynch syndrome data “suggest the strong possibility that we might be able to immunize people and combine that treatment with standard nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents such as naproxen to delay or reduce the impact of Lynch syndrome.”
“This set of findings ... opens the door to investigators in many different areas of cancer research to explore whether or not there are common frameshift mutations that might create novel neoantigens that we can go after with vaccines – be they for therapeutic benefit or for prevention,” he said.
The UNITY-NHL study, which showed that umbralisib is active and well tolerated as single-agent therapy in patients with relapsed or refractory marginal zone lymphoma, suggests “it’s quite possible that [the phosphoinositide 3-kinase delta inhibitor] is going to become a very important element in the treatment of patients with marginal zone lymphomas, and obviously it can be then used in earlier stages of diseases since it’s well tolerated, and it may well have useful activity in other B-cell malignancies,” he said.
Dr. Weiner reported having no relevant disclosures.
REPORTING FROM AACR
Preclinical findings highlight value of Lynch syndrome for cancer vaccine development
ATLANTA – Lynch syndrome serves as an excellent platform for the development of immunoprevention cancer vaccines, and findings from a preclinical Lynch syndrome mouse model support ongoing research, according to Steven M. Lipkin, MD, PhD.
A novel vaccine, which included peptides encoding four intestinal cancer frameshift peptide (FSP) neoantigens derived from coding microsatellite (cMS) mutations in the genes Nacad, Maz, Xirp1, and Senp6 elicited strong antigen-specific cellular immune responses in the model, Dr. Lipkin, the Gladys and Roland Harriman Professor of Medicine and vice chair for research in the Sanford and Joan Weill Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research.
CD4-specific T cell responses were detected for Maz, Nacad, and Senp6, and CD8-positive T cells were detected for Xirp1 and Nacad, he noted, explaining that the findings come in the wake of a recently completed clinical phase 1/2a trial that successfully demonstrated safety and immunogenicity of an FSP neoantigen-based vaccine in microsatellite unstable (MSI) colorectal cancer patients.
The current effort to further develop a cancer preventive vaccine against MSI cancers in Lynch syndrome using a preclinical mouse model involved a systematic database search to identify cMS sequences in the murine genome. Intestinal tumors obtained from Lynch syndrome mice were evaluated for mutations affecting these candidate cMS, and of 13 with a mutation frequency of 15% or higher, the 4 FSP neoantigens ultimately included in the vaccine elicited strong antigen-specific cellular immune responses.
Vaccination with peptides encoding these four intestinal cancer FSP neoantigens promoted antineoantigen immunity, reduced intestinal tumorigenicity, and prolonged overall survival, Dr. Lipkin said.
Further, based on preclinical data suggesting that naproxen in this setting might provide better risk-reducing effects, compared with aspirin (which has previously been shown to reduce colorectal cancer risk in Lynch syndrome patients), its addition to the vaccine did, indeed, improve response, he noted, explaining that naproxen worked as “sort of a super-aspirin,” that improved overall survival, compared with vaccine alone or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents alone.
In a video interview, Dr. Lipkin describes his research and its potential implications for the immunoprevention of Lynch syndrome and other cancers.
Vaccination with as few as four mutations that occur across Lynch syndrome tumors induced complete cures in some mice and delays in disease onset in others, he said.
“[This is] a very simple approach, very effective,” he added, noting that the T cells are now being studied to better understand the biology of the effects. “The idea of immunoprevention ... is actually very exciting and ... can be expanded beyond this.”
Lynch syndrome is a “great place to start,” because of the high rate of mutations, which are the most immunogenic types of mutations, he said.
“If we can get this basic paradigm to work, I think we can expand it to other types of mutations – for example, KRAS or BRAF, which are seen frequently in lung cancers, colon cancers, stomach cancers, pancreatic cancers, and others,” he said, noting that a proposal for a phase 1 clinical trial has been submitted.
ATLANTA – Lynch syndrome serves as an excellent platform for the development of immunoprevention cancer vaccines, and findings from a preclinical Lynch syndrome mouse model support ongoing research, according to Steven M. Lipkin, MD, PhD.
A novel vaccine, which included peptides encoding four intestinal cancer frameshift peptide (FSP) neoantigens derived from coding microsatellite (cMS) mutations in the genes Nacad, Maz, Xirp1, and Senp6 elicited strong antigen-specific cellular immune responses in the model, Dr. Lipkin, the Gladys and Roland Harriman Professor of Medicine and vice chair for research in the Sanford and Joan Weill Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research.
CD4-specific T cell responses were detected for Maz, Nacad, and Senp6, and CD8-positive T cells were detected for Xirp1 and Nacad, he noted, explaining that the findings come in the wake of a recently completed clinical phase 1/2a trial that successfully demonstrated safety and immunogenicity of an FSP neoantigen-based vaccine in microsatellite unstable (MSI) colorectal cancer patients.
The current effort to further develop a cancer preventive vaccine against MSI cancers in Lynch syndrome using a preclinical mouse model involved a systematic database search to identify cMS sequences in the murine genome. Intestinal tumors obtained from Lynch syndrome mice were evaluated for mutations affecting these candidate cMS, and of 13 with a mutation frequency of 15% or higher, the 4 FSP neoantigens ultimately included in the vaccine elicited strong antigen-specific cellular immune responses.
Vaccination with peptides encoding these four intestinal cancer FSP neoantigens promoted antineoantigen immunity, reduced intestinal tumorigenicity, and prolonged overall survival, Dr. Lipkin said.
Further, based on preclinical data suggesting that naproxen in this setting might provide better risk-reducing effects, compared with aspirin (which has previously been shown to reduce colorectal cancer risk in Lynch syndrome patients), its addition to the vaccine did, indeed, improve response, he noted, explaining that naproxen worked as “sort of a super-aspirin,” that improved overall survival, compared with vaccine alone or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents alone.
In a video interview, Dr. Lipkin describes his research and its potential implications for the immunoprevention of Lynch syndrome and other cancers.
Vaccination with as few as four mutations that occur across Lynch syndrome tumors induced complete cures in some mice and delays in disease onset in others, he said.
“[This is] a very simple approach, very effective,” he added, noting that the T cells are now being studied to better understand the biology of the effects. “The idea of immunoprevention ... is actually very exciting and ... can be expanded beyond this.”
Lynch syndrome is a “great place to start,” because of the high rate of mutations, which are the most immunogenic types of mutations, he said.
“If we can get this basic paradigm to work, I think we can expand it to other types of mutations – for example, KRAS or BRAF, which are seen frequently in lung cancers, colon cancers, stomach cancers, pancreatic cancers, and others,” he said, noting that a proposal for a phase 1 clinical trial has been submitted.
ATLANTA – Lynch syndrome serves as an excellent platform for the development of immunoprevention cancer vaccines, and findings from a preclinical Lynch syndrome mouse model support ongoing research, according to Steven M. Lipkin, MD, PhD.
A novel vaccine, which included peptides encoding four intestinal cancer frameshift peptide (FSP) neoantigens derived from coding microsatellite (cMS) mutations in the genes Nacad, Maz, Xirp1, and Senp6 elicited strong antigen-specific cellular immune responses in the model, Dr. Lipkin, the Gladys and Roland Harriman Professor of Medicine and vice chair for research in the Sanford and Joan Weill Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research.
CD4-specific T cell responses were detected for Maz, Nacad, and Senp6, and CD8-positive T cells were detected for Xirp1 and Nacad, he noted, explaining that the findings come in the wake of a recently completed clinical phase 1/2a trial that successfully demonstrated safety and immunogenicity of an FSP neoantigen-based vaccine in microsatellite unstable (MSI) colorectal cancer patients.
The current effort to further develop a cancer preventive vaccine against MSI cancers in Lynch syndrome using a preclinical mouse model involved a systematic database search to identify cMS sequences in the murine genome. Intestinal tumors obtained from Lynch syndrome mice were evaluated for mutations affecting these candidate cMS, and of 13 with a mutation frequency of 15% or higher, the 4 FSP neoantigens ultimately included in the vaccine elicited strong antigen-specific cellular immune responses.
Vaccination with peptides encoding these four intestinal cancer FSP neoantigens promoted antineoantigen immunity, reduced intestinal tumorigenicity, and prolonged overall survival, Dr. Lipkin said.
Further, based on preclinical data suggesting that naproxen in this setting might provide better risk-reducing effects, compared with aspirin (which has previously been shown to reduce colorectal cancer risk in Lynch syndrome patients), its addition to the vaccine did, indeed, improve response, he noted, explaining that naproxen worked as “sort of a super-aspirin,” that improved overall survival, compared with vaccine alone or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents alone.
In a video interview, Dr. Lipkin describes his research and its potential implications for the immunoprevention of Lynch syndrome and other cancers.
Vaccination with as few as four mutations that occur across Lynch syndrome tumors induced complete cures in some mice and delays in disease onset in others, he said.
“[This is] a very simple approach, very effective,” he added, noting that the T cells are now being studied to better understand the biology of the effects. “The idea of immunoprevention ... is actually very exciting and ... can be expanded beyond this.”
Lynch syndrome is a “great place to start,” because of the high rate of mutations, which are the most immunogenic types of mutations, he said.
“If we can get this basic paradigm to work, I think we can expand it to other types of mutations – for example, KRAS or BRAF, which are seen frequently in lung cancers, colon cancers, stomach cancers, pancreatic cancers, and others,” he said, noting that a proposal for a phase 1 clinical trial has been submitted.
REPORTING FROM AACR 2019
CAR T cells target HER2 expression in advanced sarcomas
ATLANTA – Sarcomas of bone and soft tissues are considered to be “antigenically cold” tumors, with few identifiable mutations that may be susceptible to targeted therapies.
Some sarcoma subtypes such as osteosarcoma and rhabomyosarcoma, however, frequently express the human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 on tumor surfaces. Although HER2 expression in these tumors is at too low a level for HER2-targeted therapies such as trastuzumab (Herceptin), HER2 appears to be an opportunistic target for chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy, according to Shoba Navai, MD, from Baylor College of Medicine, Houston.
In a video interview at the 2019 annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research, Dr. Navai describes her team’s early experience using a HER2-targeted CAR-T cell construct and preinfusion lymphodepletion in patients with advanced sarcomas.
Development of the CAR-T cell construct is supported by the Cancer Prevention & Research Institute of Texas, Stand Up to Cancer, the St. Baldrick’s Foundation, Cookies for Kids’ Cancer, Alex’s Lemonade Stand, and a grant from the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Navai reported having no disclosures.
ATLANTA – Sarcomas of bone and soft tissues are considered to be “antigenically cold” tumors, with few identifiable mutations that may be susceptible to targeted therapies.
Some sarcoma subtypes such as osteosarcoma and rhabomyosarcoma, however, frequently express the human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 on tumor surfaces. Although HER2 expression in these tumors is at too low a level for HER2-targeted therapies such as trastuzumab (Herceptin), HER2 appears to be an opportunistic target for chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy, according to Shoba Navai, MD, from Baylor College of Medicine, Houston.
In a video interview at the 2019 annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research, Dr. Navai describes her team’s early experience using a HER2-targeted CAR-T cell construct and preinfusion lymphodepletion in patients with advanced sarcomas.
Development of the CAR-T cell construct is supported by the Cancer Prevention & Research Institute of Texas, Stand Up to Cancer, the St. Baldrick’s Foundation, Cookies for Kids’ Cancer, Alex’s Lemonade Stand, and a grant from the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Navai reported having no disclosures.
ATLANTA – Sarcomas of bone and soft tissues are considered to be “antigenically cold” tumors, with few identifiable mutations that may be susceptible to targeted therapies.
Some sarcoma subtypes such as osteosarcoma and rhabomyosarcoma, however, frequently express the human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 on tumor surfaces. Although HER2 expression in these tumors is at too low a level for HER2-targeted therapies such as trastuzumab (Herceptin), HER2 appears to be an opportunistic target for chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy, according to Shoba Navai, MD, from Baylor College of Medicine, Houston.
In a video interview at the 2019 annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research, Dr. Navai describes her team’s early experience using a HER2-targeted CAR-T cell construct and preinfusion lymphodepletion in patients with advanced sarcomas.
Development of the CAR-T cell construct is supported by the Cancer Prevention & Research Institute of Texas, Stand Up to Cancer, the St. Baldrick’s Foundation, Cookies for Kids’ Cancer, Alex’s Lemonade Stand, and a grant from the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Navai reported having no disclosures.
REPORTING FROM AACR 2019
Combo may improve PFS, OS for certain ovarian cancer patients
HONOLULU – Combining avelumab with pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) may provide a survival benefit in certain patients with platinum-resistant or refractory epithelial ovarian cancer, a phase 3 trial suggests.
In the overall study population, progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) rates were not significantly different for patients who received avelumab plus PLD and those who received avelumab or PLD alone.
However, some subgroups did experience survival benefits with the combination, including patients who were positive for programmed death–ligand 1 (PD-L1) and those who had received two or three prior lines of therapy.
Eric Pujade-Lauraine, MD, PhD, of ARCAGY-GINECO in Paris, presented these results from the JAVELIN Ovarian 200 trial at the Society of Gynecologic Oncology’s Annual Meeting on Women’s Cancer.
The trial enrolled 566 patients with platinum-resistant or refractory epithelial ovarian cancer. They were not preselected for PD-L1 expression.
Patients were randomized 1:1:1 to receive avelumab at 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks (n = 188), avelumab plus PLD at 40 mg/m2 every 4 weeks (n = 188), or PLD (n = 190).
Baseline characteristics were similar across the treatment arms. The median age was 61 in the avelumab arm and 60 in the other two arms (range, 26-86 years). In each arm, about 37% of patients had bulky disease, and all but two patients (both in the avelumab arm) had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0 or 1.
Nearly half of patients had received one line of prior therapy, and the rest had received two or three prior lines of therapy. About 75% of patients had platinum-resistant disease, and 25% were platinum refractory.
The median duration of study treatment was 10.1 weeks in the avelumab arm and 16.0 weeks in the pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) arm. In the combination arm, the median treatment duration was 16.9 weeks for avelumab and 16.3 weeks for PLD. In each arm, the most common reason for treatment discontinuation was disease progression.
Safety
Dr. Pujade-Lauraine said no new safety signals were observed with avelumab alone or in combination.
Serious treatment-related adverse events (AEs) occurred in 7.5% of patients in the avelumab arm, 17.6% of patients in the combination arm, and 10.7% of patients in the PLD arm. Discontinuation because of a treatment-related AE occurred in 6.4%, 4.4%, and 7.3% of patients, respectively.
There was one treatment-related AE leading to death in the avelumab arm and one in the PLD arm.
AEs that were more common in the combination arm than in the avelumab and PLD arms (respectively) were fatigue/asthenia (42.3%, 26.7%, and 28.8%), rash (34.1%, 8.0%, and 16.9%), stomatitis (28.0%, 2.1%, and 20.3%), and palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia syndrome (33.0%, 0.5%, and 22.6%).
Response
The objective response rate was 3.7% in the avelumab arm, 13.3% in the combination arm, and 4.2% in the PLD arm. There were two complete responses; both occurred in the combination arm.
The response rate was significantly higher in the combination arm (odds ratio, 3.458, P = .0018) than in the PLD arm, but there was no significant difference in response rate between the avelumab arm and the PLD arm (OR, 0.890, P = .8280).
The median duration of response was 9.2 months in the avelumab arm, 8.5 months in the combination arm, and 13.1 months in the PLD arm.
Survival
There was a trend toward improved PFS with avelumab plus PLD, but the significance threshold was not met.
The median PFS was 1.9 months in the avelumab arm, 3.7 months in the combination arm, and 3.5 months in the PLD arm. With the PLD arm as a reference, the stratified hazard ratio was 1.68 for the avelumab arm (P greater than .999) and 0.78 for the combination arm (P = .0301).
The median OS was 11.8 months in the avelumab arm, 15.7 months in the combination arm, and 13.1 months in the PLD arm. The HR was 1.14 for the avelumab arm (P = .8253) and 0.89 for the combination arm (P = .2082).
“[A]velumab plus PLD showed clinical activity, but, in this unselected population, the trial did not meet the primary objective [of improving PFS or OS compared to PLD alone],” Dr. Pujade-Lauraine noted. “However, prespecified analyses indicate a potential role of PD-L1 expression as a predictor of clinical benefit.”
When Dr. Pujade-Lauraine and his colleagues looked at patients who were positive for PD-L1 (57%), the researchers found a significant improvement in PFS, but not OS, with avelumab plus PLD.
The median PFS was 1.9 months in the avelumab arm (HR,1.45, P = .0303), 3.7 months in the combination arm (HR, 0.65, P = .0143), and 3.0 months in the PLD arm.
The median OS was 13.7 months in the avelumab arm (HR, 0.83, P = .3580), 17.7 months in the combination arm (HR, 0.72, P = .0842), and 13.1 months in the PLD arm.
The researchers also found that PFS and OS were better with avelumab plus PLD versus PLD alone among patients who had received two or three prior treatment regimens at baseline. The HR was 0.62 for PFS and 0.64 for OS.
Dr. Pujade-Lauraine said further subgroup analyses are ongoing.
This trial was sponsored by Pfizer. Dr. Pujade-Lauraine reported relationships with AstraZeneca, Clovis Oncology, Incyte, Pfizer, Roche, and Tesaro.
SOURCE: Pujade-Lauraine E et al. SGO 2019, Abstract LBA1.
HONOLULU – Combining avelumab with pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) may provide a survival benefit in certain patients with platinum-resistant or refractory epithelial ovarian cancer, a phase 3 trial suggests.
In the overall study population, progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) rates were not significantly different for patients who received avelumab plus PLD and those who received avelumab or PLD alone.
However, some subgroups did experience survival benefits with the combination, including patients who were positive for programmed death–ligand 1 (PD-L1) and those who had received two or three prior lines of therapy.
Eric Pujade-Lauraine, MD, PhD, of ARCAGY-GINECO in Paris, presented these results from the JAVELIN Ovarian 200 trial at the Society of Gynecologic Oncology’s Annual Meeting on Women’s Cancer.
The trial enrolled 566 patients with platinum-resistant or refractory epithelial ovarian cancer. They were not preselected for PD-L1 expression.
Patients were randomized 1:1:1 to receive avelumab at 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks (n = 188), avelumab plus PLD at 40 mg/m2 every 4 weeks (n = 188), or PLD (n = 190).
Baseline characteristics were similar across the treatment arms. The median age was 61 in the avelumab arm and 60 in the other two arms (range, 26-86 years). In each arm, about 37% of patients had bulky disease, and all but two patients (both in the avelumab arm) had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0 or 1.
Nearly half of patients had received one line of prior therapy, and the rest had received two or three prior lines of therapy. About 75% of patients had platinum-resistant disease, and 25% were platinum refractory.
The median duration of study treatment was 10.1 weeks in the avelumab arm and 16.0 weeks in the pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) arm. In the combination arm, the median treatment duration was 16.9 weeks for avelumab and 16.3 weeks for PLD. In each arm, the most common reason for treatment discontinuation was disease progression.
Safety
Dr. Pujade-Lauraine said no new safety signals were observed with avelumab alone or in combination.
Serious treatment-related adverse events (AEs) occurred in 7.5% of patients in the avelumab arm, 17.6% of patients in the combination arm, and 10.7% of patients in the PLD arm. Discontinuation because of a treatment-related AE occurred in 6.4%, 4.4%, and 7.3% of patients, respectively.
There was one treatment-related AE leading to death in the avelumab arm and one in the PLD arm.
AEs that were more common in the combination arm than in the avelumab and PLD arms (respectively) were fatigue/asthenia (42.3%, 26.7%, and 28.8%), rash (34.1%, 8.0%, and 16.9%), stomatitis (28.0%, 2.1%, and 20.3%), and palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia syndrome (33.0%, 0.5%, and 22.6%).
Response
The objective response rate was 3.7% in the avelumab arm, 13.3% in the combination arm, and 4.2% in the PLD arm. There were two complete responses; both occurred in the combination arm.
The response rate was significantly higher in the combination arm (odds ratio, 3.458, P = .0018) than in the PLD arm, but there was no significant difference in response rate between the avelumab arm and the PLD arm (OR, 0.890, P = .8280).
The median duration of response was 9.2 months in the avelumab arm, 8.5 months in the combination arm, and 13.1 months in the PLD arm.
Survival
There was a trend toward improved PFS with avelumab plus PLD, but the significance threshold was not met.
The median PFS was 1.9 months in the avelumab arm, 3.7 months in the combination arm, and 3.5 months in the PLD arm. With the PLD arm as a reference, the stratified hazard ratio was 1.68 for the avelumab arm (P greater than .999) and 0.78 for the combination arm (P = .0301).
The median OS was 11.8 months in the avelumab arm, 15.7 months in the combination arm, and 13.1 months in the PLD arm. The HR was 1.14 for the avelumab arm (P = .8253) and 0.89 for the combination arm (P = .2082).
“[A]velumab plus PLD showed clinical activity, but, in this unselected population, the trial did not meet the primary objective [of improving PFS or OS compared to PLD alone],” Dr. Pujade-Lauraine noted. “However, prespecified analyses indicate a potential role of PD-L1 expression as a predictor of clinical benefit.”
When Dr. Pujade-Lauraine and his colleagues looked at patients who were positive for PD-L1 (57%), the researchers found a significant improvement in PFS, but not OS, with avelumab plus PLD.
The median PFS was 1.9 months in the avelumab arm (HR,1.45, P = .0303), 3.7 months in the combination arm (HR, 0.65, P = .0143), and 3.0 months in the PLD arm.
The median OS was 13.7 months in the avelumab arm (HR, 0.83, P = .3580), 17.7 months in the combination arm (HR, 0.72, P = .0842), and 13.1 months in the PLD arm.
The researchers also found that PFS and OS were better with avelumab plus PLD versus PLD alone among patients who had received two or three prior treatment regimens at baseline. The HR was 0.62 for PFS and 0.64 for OS.
Dr. Pujade-Lauraine said further subgroup analyses are ongoing.
This trial was sponsored by Pfizer. Dr. Pujade-Lauraine reported relationships with AstraZeneca, Clovis Oncology, Incyte, Pfizer, Roche, and Tesaro.
SOURCE: Pujade-Lauraine E et al. SGO 2019, Abstract LBA1.
HONOLULU – Combining avelumab with pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) may provide a survival benefit in certain patients with platinum-resistant or refractory epithelial ovarian cancer, a phase 3 trial suggests.
In the overall study population, progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) rates were not significantly different for patients who received avelumab plus PLD and those who received avelumab or PLD alone.
However, some subgroups did experience survival benefits with the combination, including patients who were positive for programmed death–ligand 1 (PD-L1) and those who had received two or three prior lines of therapy.
Eric Pujade-Lauraine, MD, PhD, of ARCAGY-GINECO in Paris, presented these results from the JAVELIN Ovarian 200 trial at the Society of Gynecologic Oncology’s Annual Meeting on Women’s Cancer.
The trial enrolled 566 patients with platinum-resistant or refractory epithelial ovarian cancer. They were not preselected for PD-L1 expression.
Patients were randomized 1:1:1 to receive avelumab at 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks (n = 188), avelumab plus PLD at 40 mg/m2 every 4 weeks (n = 188), or PLD (n = 190).
Baseline characteristics were similar across the treatment arms. The median age was 61 in the avelumab arm and 60 in the other two arms (range, 26-86 years). In each arm, about 37% of patients had bulky disease, and all but two patients (both in the avelumab arm) had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0 or 1.
Nearly half of patients had received one line of prior therapy, and the rest had received two or three prior lines of therapy. About 75% of patients had platinum-resistant disease, and 25% were platinum refractory.
The median duration of study treatment was 10.1 weeks in the avelumab arm and 16.0 weeks in the pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) arm. In the combination arm, the median treatment duration was 16.9 weeks for avelumab and 16.3 weeks for PLD. In each arm, the most common reason for treatment discontinuation was disease progression.
Safety
Dr. Pujade-Lauraine said no new safety signals were observed with avelumab alone or in combination.
Serious treatment-related adverse events (AEs) occurred in 7.5% of patients in the avelumab arm, 17.6% of patients in the combination arm, and 10.7% of patients in the PLD arm. Discontinuation because of a treatment-related AE occurred in 6.4%, 4.4%, and 7.3% of patients, respectively.
There was one treatment-related AE leading to death in the avelumab arm and one in the PLD arm.
AEs that were more common in the combination arm than in the avelumab and PLD arms (respectively) were fatigue/asthenia (42.3%, 26.7%, and 28.8%), rash (34.1%, 8.0%, and 16.9%), stomatitis (28.0%, 2.1%, and 20.3%), and palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia syndrome (33.0%, 0.5%, and 22.6%).
Response
The objective response rate was 3.7% in the avelumab arm, 13.3% in the combination arm, and 4.2% in the PLD arm. There were two complete responses; both occurred in the combination arm.
The response rate was significantly higher in the combination arm (odds ratio, 3.458, P = .0018) than in the PLD arm, but there was no significant difference in response rate between the avelumab arm and the PLD arm (OR, 0.890, P = .8280).
The median duration of response was 9.2 months in the avelumab arm, 8.5 months in the combination arm, and 13.1 months in the PLD arm.
Survival
There was a trend toward improved PFS with avelumab plus PLD, but the significance threshold was not met.
The median PFS was 1.9 months in the avelumab arm, 3.7 months in the combination arm, and 3.5 months in the PLD arm. With the PLD arm as a reference, the stratified hazard ratio was 1.68 for the avelumab arm (P greater than .999) and 0.78 for the combination arm (P = .0301).
The median OS was 11.8 months in the avelumab arm, 15.7 months in the combination arm, and 13.1 months in the PLD arm. The HR was 1.14 for the avelumab arm (P = .8253) and 0.89 for the combination arm (P = .2082).
“[A]velumab plus PLD showed clinical activity, but, in this unselected population, the trial did not meet the primary objective [of improving PFS or OS compared to PLD alone],” Dr. Pujade-Lauraine noted. “However, prespecified analyses indicate a potential role of PD-L1 expression as a predictor of clinical benefit.”
When Dr. Pujade-Lauraine and his colleagues looked at patients who were positive for PD-L1 (57%), the researchers found a significant improvement in PFS, but not OS, with avelumab plus PLD.
The median PFS was 1.9 months in the avelumab arm (HR,1.45, P = .0303), 3.7 months in the combination arm (HR, 0.65, P = .0143), and 3.0 months in the PLD arm.
The median OS was 13.7 months in the avelumab arm (HR, 0.83, P = .3580), 17.7 months in the combination arm (HR, 0.72, P = .0842), and 13.1 months in the PLD arm.
The researchers also found that PFS and OS were better with avelumab plus PLD versus PLD alone among patients who had received two or three prior treatment regimens at baseline. The HR was 0.62 for PFS and 0.64 for OS.
Dr. Pujade-Lauraine said further subgroup analyses are ongoing.
This trial was sponsored by Pfizer. Dr. Pujade-Lauraine reported relationships with AstraZeneca, Clovis Oncology, Incyte, Pfizer, Roche, and Tesaro.
SOURCE: Pujade-Lauraine E et al. SGO 2019, Abstract LBA1.
REPORTING FROM SGO 2019
Novel immunostimulant combo shows early efficacy
SAN FRANCISCO – A combination of two novel immune-stimulating agents has shown early evidence of efficacy against malignant melanoma, leiomyosarcoma, and triple-negative breast cancer in a phase 1b, dose-escalating study.
Among 11 evaluable patients enrolled in a trial of NKTR-262, a small molecule agonist of toll-like receptors (TLR) 7/8, and bempegaldesleukin, an interleukin-2 pathway agonist, 2 had a partial response and 3 had stable disease, reported Adi Diab, MD, from the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, and his colleagues.
Patients tolerated the combination well, and there have been no serious adverse events or dose-limiting toxicities.
“Pharmacodynamic data demonstrate both activation of the systemic adaptive and the local innate immune system, and we have seen early evidence of clinical activity in patients who are refractory to checkpoint inhibitors with immunotherapy regimens,” Dr. Diab said at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) – Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC): Clinical Immuno-Oncology Symposium.
NKTR-262 is injected into tumors and is designed to be retained in the tumor microenvironment where it helps to activate antigen-presenting cells, such as dendritic cells, and primes development of new, antigen-specific cytotoxic T cells. Bempegaldesleukin is a cytokine that works within the IL-2 pathway to increase CD8-positive T cells and natural killer (NK) cells in the tumor microenvironment.
The rationale for the combination is that NKTR-262 can activate innate immunity in cells surrounding the tumor microenvironment and activate the machinery of antigen-presenting cells, and bempegaldesleukin can prime and boost a systemic tumor immune response that can ultimately mediate antitumor activity in distant lesions, Dr. Adib said.
In preclinical models, the combination of these agents led to a robust antitumor effect that also involved distant lesions through mediation of the abscopal effect, in which treatment of a tumor activates an immune response against distant tumor cells as well, Dr. Diab said.
The REVEAL study is an ongoing, phase 1b/2 trial looking at the combination in melanoma, Merkel cell carcinoma, triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), ovarian cancer, renal cell carcinoma, colorectal cancer, urothelial carcinoma, and sarcoma.
The primary goal of the study is to evaluate safety and determine the optimal phase 2 dose of the combination, evaluate biomarkers of response, and assess antitumor activity. As of Jan. 23, 2019, 13 patients were enrolled and evaluable for safety, and 11 were evaluable for the preliminary efficacy analysis.
The most common treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) with the combination were transient grade 1 or 2 flu-like symptoms, rash, fatigue, pruritus, and nausea. One patients developed grade 3 maculopapular rash and leukocytosis.
Most of the TRAEs are attributable to bempegaldesleukin. There were no immune-mediated AEs and no TRAEs resulted in study discontinuation.
Tumor biopsies obtained 24 hours after injection of NKTR-262 confirmed the activation of TLR 7/8 and robust induction of type 1 interferon, interferon-alpha, and interferon-beta gene-related signatures necessary for optimal antigen presentation.
Dr. Diab noted that in a different trial of bempegaldesleukin monotherapy there was no significant increase in the type 1 interferon gene signature, but the agent did promote activation of the adaptive immune system.
The complementary nature of the two novel agents could also be demonstrated in evaluation of peripheral blood samples, which showed that, although there was no proliferation of T or NK cells following NKTR-262 injection, the addition of bempegaldesleukin resulted in the proliferation of both effector T cells and NK cells to enhance the systemic immune response.
The preliminary efficacy analysis showed that two of five patients with stage IV melanoma who experienced disease progression on prior immune checkpoint inhibitors had partial responses, including one who had a 100% reduction in target lesions and the other with a 50% reduction. In addition, two patients with heavily pretreated leiomyosarcoma had stable disease as the best response, as did the single patient with TNBC.
The maximum tolerated dose of the combination has not been identified, and the investigators are continuing to enroll patients.
The REVEAL study is supported by Nektar Therapeutics. Dr. Diab reported institutional research funding, consulting fees, and advisory board participation from Nektar, Bristol-Myers Squib, Idera Pharmaceuticals, Jounce Therapeutics, and Array BioPharma.
SOURCE: Diab A et al. ASCO-SITC, Abstract 26.
SAN FRANCISCO – A combination of two novel immune-stimulating agents has shown early evidence of efficacy against malignant melanoma, leiomyosarcoma, and triple-negative breast cancer in a phase 1b, dose-escalating study.
Among 11 evaluable patients enrolled in a trial of NKTR-262, a small molecule agonist of toll-like receptors (TLR) 7/8, and bempegaldesleukin, an interleukin-2 pathway agonist, 2 had a partial response and 3 had stable disease, reported Adi Diab, MD, from the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, and his colleagues.
Patients tolerated the combination well, and there have been no serious adverse events or dose-limiting toxicities.
“Pharmacodynamic data demonstrate both activation of the systemic adaptive and the local innate immune system, and we have seen early evidence of clinical activity in patients who are refractory to checkpoint inhibitors with immunotherapy regimens,” Dr. Diab said at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) – Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC): Clinical Immuno-Oncology Symposium.
NKTR-262 is injected into tumors and is designed to be retained in the tumor microenvironment where it helps to activate antigen-presenting cells, such as dendritic cells, and primes development of new, antigen-specific cytotoxic T cells. Bempegaldesleukin is a cytokine that works within the IL-2 pathway to increase CD8-positive T cells and natural killer (NK) cells in the tumor microenvironment.
The rationale for the combination is that NKTR-262 can activate innate immunity in cells surrounding the tumor microenvironment and activate the machinery of antigen-presenting cells, and bempegaldesleukin can prime and boost a systemic tumor immune response that can ultimately mediate antitumor activity in distant lesions, Dr. Adib said.
In preclinical models, the combination of these agents led to a robust antitumor effect that also involved distant lesions through mediation of the abscopal effect, in which treatment of a tumor activates an immune response against distant tumor cells as well, Dr. Diab said.
The REVEAL study is an ongoing, phase 1b/2 trial looking at the combination in melanoma, Merkel cell carcinoma, triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), ovarian cancer, renal cell carcinoma, colorectal cancer, urothelial carcinoma, and sarcoma.
The primary goal of the study is to evaluate safety and determine the optimal phase 2 dose of the combination, evaluate biomarkers of response, and assess antitumor activity. As of Jan. 23, 2019, 13 patients were enrolled and evaluable for safety, and 11 were evaluable for the preliminary efficacy analysis.
The most common treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) with the combination were transient grade 1 or 2 flu-like symptoms, rash, fatigue, pruritus, and nausea. One patients developed grade 3 maculopapular rash and leukocytosis.
Most of the TRAEs are attributable to bempegaldesleukin. There were no immune-mediated AEs and no TRAEs resulted in study discontinuation.
Tumor biopsies obtained 24 hours after injection of NKTR-262 confirmed the activation of TLR 7/8 and robust induction of type 1 interferon, interferon-alpha, and interferon-beta gene-related signatures necessary for optimal antigen presentation.
Dr. Diab noted that in a different trial of bempegaldesleukin monotherapy there was no significant increase in the type 1 interferon gene signature, but the agent did promote activation of the adaptive immune system.
The complementary nature of the two novel agents could also be demonstrated in evaluation of peripheral blood samples, which showed that, although there was no proliferation of T or NK cells following NKTR-262 injection, the addition of bempegaldesleukin resulted in the proliferation of both effector T cells and NK cells to enhance the systemic immune response.
The preliminary efficacy analysis showed that two of five patients with stage IV melanoma who experienced disease progression on prior immune checkpoint inhibitors had partial responses, including one who had a 100% reduction in target lesions and the other with a 50% reduction. In addition, two patients with heavily pretreated leiomyosarcoma had stable disease as the best response, as did the single patient with TNBC.
The maximum tolerated dose of the combination has not been identified, and the investigators are continuing to enroll patients.
The REVEAL study is supported by Nektar Therapeutics. Dr. Diab reported institutional research funding, consulting fees, and advisory board participation from Nektar, Bristol-Myers Squib, Idera Pharmaceuticals, Jounce Therapeutics, and Array BioPharma.
SOURCE: Diab A et al. ASCO-SITC, Abstract 26.
SAN FRANCISCO – A combination of two novel immune-stimulating agents has shown early evidence of efficacy against malignant melanoma, leiomyosarcoma, and triple-negative breast cancer in a phase 1b, dose-escalating study.
Among 11 evaluable patients enrolled in a trial of NKTR-262, a small molecule agonist of toll-like receptors (TLR) 7/8, and bempegaldesleukin, an interleukin-2 pathway agonist, 2 had a partial response and 3 had stable disease, reported Adi Diab, MD, from the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, and his colleagues.
Patients tolerated the combination well, and there have been no serious adverse events or dose-limiting toxicities.
“Pharmacodynamic data demonstrate both activation of the systemic adaptive and the local innate immune system, and we have seen early evidence of clinical activity in patients who are refractory to checkpoint inhibitors with immunotherapy regimens,” Dr. Diab said at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) – Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC): Clinical Immuno-Oncology Symposium.
NKTR-262 is injected into tumors and is designed to be retained in the tumor microenvironment where it helps to activate antigen-presenting cells, such as dendritic cells, and primes development of new, antigen-specific cytotoxic T cells. Bempegaldesleukin is a cytokine that works within the IL-2 pathway to increase CD8-positive T cells and natural killer (NK) cells in the tumor microenvironment.
The rationale for the combination is that NKTR-262 can activate innate immunity in cells surrounding the tumor microenvironment and activate the machinery of antigen-presenting cells, and bempegaldesleukin can prime and boost a systemic tumor immune response that can ultimately mediate antitumor activity in distant lesions, Dr. Adib said.
In preclinical models, the combination of these agents led to a robust antitumor effect that also involved distant lesions through mediation of the abscopal effect, in which treatment of a tumor activates an immune response against distant tumor cells as well, Dr. Diab said.
The REVEAL study is an ongoing, phase 1b/2 trial looking at the combination in melanoma, Merkel cell carcinoma, triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), ovarian cancer, renal cell carcinoma, colorectal cancer, urothelial carcinoma, and sarcoma.
The primary goal of the study is to evaluate safety and determine the optimal phase 2 dose of the combination, evaluate biomarkers of response, and assess antitumor activity. As of Jan. 23, 2019, 13 patients were enrolled and evaluable for safety, and 11 were evaluable for the preliminary efficacy analysis.
The most common treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) with the combination were transient grade 1 or 2 flu-like symptoms, rash, fatigue, pruritus, and nausea. One patients developed grade 3 maculopapular rash and leukocytosis.
Most of the TRAEs are attributable to bempegaldesleukin. There were no immune-mediated AEs and no TRAEs resulted in study discontinuation.
Tumor biopsies obtained 24 hours after injection of NKTR-262 confirmed the activation of TLR 7/8 and robust induction of type 1 interferon, interferon-alpha, and interferon-beta gene-related signatures necessary for optimal antigen presentation.
Dr. Diab noted that in a different trial of bempegaldesleukin monotherapy there was no significant increase in the type 1 interferon gene signature, but the agent did promote activation of the adaptive immune system.
The complementary nature of the two novel agents could also be demonstrated in evaluation of peripheral blood samples, which showed that, although there was no proliferation of T or NK cells following NKTR-262 injection, the addition of bempegaldesleukin resulted in the proliferation of both effector T cells and NK cells to enhance the systemic immune response.
The preliminary efficacy analysis showed that two of five patients with stage IV melanoma who experienced disease progression on prior immune checkpoint inhibitors had partial responses, including one who had a 100% reduction in target lesions and the other with a 50% reduction. In addition, two patients with heavily pretreated leiomyosarcoma had stable disease as the best response, as did the single patient with TNBC.
The maximum tolerated dose of the combination has not been identified, and the investigators are continuing to enroll patients.
The REVEAL study is supported by Nektar Therapeutics. Dr. Diab reported institutional research funding, consulting fees, and advisory board participation from Nektar, Bristol-Myers Squib, Idera Pharmaceuticals, Jounce Therapeutics, and Array BioPharma.
SOURCE: Diab A et al. ASCO-SITC, Abstract 26.
REPORTING FROM ASCO-SITC