Combination Therapy With Nivolumab and PD-L1/IDO Peptide Vaccine to Patients With Metastatic Melanoma

Study Purpose

Combination therapy is becoming more and more general in the treatment of oncological diseases. In this clinical trial combination the standard immunotherapeutic treatment; the programmed death 1 (PD-1) regulatory antibody Nivolumab and a peptide vaccine consisting of programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) and Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) peptides will be tested in patients with metastatic melanoma. Patients will be treated with Nivolumab every second week as long as there is clinical benefit. The PD-L1/IDO peptide vaccine is given from start of Nivolumab and every second week for the first 6 vaccines and thereafter every fourth week up to 1 year.

Recruitment Criteria

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Healthy volunteers are participants who do not have a disease or condition, or related conditions or symptoms

No
Study Type

An interventional clinical study is where participants are assigned to receive one or more interventions (or no intervention) so that researchers can evaluate the effects of the interventions on biomedical or health-related outcomes.


An observational clinical study is where participants identified as belonging to study groups are assessed for biomedical or health outcomes.


Searching Both is inclusive of interventional and observational studies.

Interventional
Eligible Ages 18 Years and Over
Gender All
More Inclusion & Exclusion Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

1. Age ≥ 18. 2. The patient has unrespectable or metastatic melanoma with progressive, persistent or recurrent disease on or following treatment with standard of care agents. 3. Patients belonging to one of the following patient groups will be enrolled: Cohort A: Anti PD-1/PD-L1 naïve patients (30 patients). The patient is a candidate for Nivolumab monotherapy. Prior anti-PD-1/anti-PD-L1 antibody treatment is not allowed. OR Cohort B: Extension cohort (10 patients). Progressive disease ON anti-PD-1 monotherapy.Subjects should not have experienced serious and/or life-threatening toxicity to antibody therapy. OR Cohort C: Extension cohort (10 patients). Progressive disease during follow up OFF anti-PD-1 after clinical benefit (SD/PR/CR) on anti-PD-1 therapy. Subjects should not have discontinued antibody therapy due to serious and/or lifethreatening toxicity. 4. At least one measurable parameter according to RECIST 1.1. 5. The patient has an ECOG performance status of 0 or 1. 6. The patient is a female of childbearing potential with negative pregnancy test. 7. For women: Agreement to use contraceptive methods with a failure rate of < 1 % per year during the treatment period and for at least 120 days after the treatment. 8. For men: Agreement to use contraceptive measures and agreement to refrain from donating sperm. 9. The patient has met the following hematological and biochemical criteria: 1. AST and ALT ≤2,5 X ULN or ≤5 X ULN with liver metastases. 2. Serum total bilirubin ≤1,5 X ULN or direct bilirubin ≤ ULN for patient with total bilirubin level > 1,5 ULN. 3. Serum creatinine ≤1,5 X ULN. 4. ANC (Absolute Neutrophil Count) ≥1,000/mcL. 5. Platelets ≥ 75,000 /mcL. 6. Hemoglobin ≥ 9 g/dL eller ≥ 5.6 mmol/L. 10. Signed declaration of content after oral and written information about the protocol.

Exclusion Criteria:

1. The patient has not recovered to grade 0-1 from adverse events due to prior chemotherapy, radioactive or biological cancer therapy. 2. The patient has not recovered from surgery or is less than 4 weeks from major surgery. 3. The patient has a history of life-threatening or severe immune related adverse events on treatment with another immunotherapy and is considered to be at risk of not recovering. 4. The patient is expected to require any other form of systemic antineoplastic therapy while receiving the treatment. 5. The patient has a history of severe clinical autoimmune disease. 6. The patient has a history of pneumonitis, organ transplant, human immunodeficiency virus positive, active hepatitis B or hepatitis C. 7. The patient requires systemic steroids for management of immune-related adverse events experienced on another immunotherapy. 8. The patient has active CNS metastases and/or carcinomatous meningitis. However, patients with subclinical brain metastases < 1 cm can be included (maximum of 4 metastases < 1 cm). (Patients with previously treated brain metastases may participate provided they are clinically stable. Patients with untreated brain metastasis will be excluded) 9. The patient has any condition that will interfere with patient compliance or safety (including but not limited to psychiatric or substance abuse disorders) 10. The patient is pregnant or breastfeeding. 11. The patient is unable to voluntarily agree to participate by signed informed consent or assent. 12. The patient has an active infection requiring systemic therapy. 13. The patient has received a live virus vaccine within 30 days of planned start of therapy. 14. Known side effects to Montanide ISA-51. 15. Significant medical disorder according to investigator; e.g. severe asthma or chronic obstructive lung disease, dysregulated heart disease or dysregulated diabetes mellitus. 16. Concurrent treatment with other experimental drugs. 17. Any active autoimmune diseases e.g. autoimmune neutropenia, thrombocytopenia or hemolytic anemia, systemic lupus erythematosus, scleroderma, myasthenia gravis, autoimmune glomerulonephritis, autoimmune adrenal deficiency, autoimmune thyroiditis etc. 18. Severe allergy or anaphylactic reactions earlier in life

Trial Details

Trial ID:

This trial id was obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, providing information on publicly and privately supported clinical studies of human participants with locations in all 50 States and in 196 countries.

NCT03047928
Phase

Phase 1: Studies that emphasize safety and how the drug is metabolized and excreted in humans.

Phase 2: Studies that gather preliminary data on effectiveness (whether the drug works in people who have a certain disease or condition) and additional safety data.

Phase 3: Studies that gather more information about safety and effectiveness by studying different populations and different dosages and by using the drug in combination with other drugs.

Phase 4: Studies occurring after FDA has approved a drug for marketing, efficacy, or optimal use.

Phase 1/Phase 2
Lead Sponsor

The sponsor is the organization or person who oversees the clinical study and is responsible for analyzing the study data.

Inge Marie Svane
Principal Investigator

The person who is responsible for the scientific and technical direction of the entire clinical study.

Inge Marie Svane, Prof., MDCathrine Lund Lorentzen, MD
Principal Investigator Affiliation National Center for Cancer Immune Therapy, Dept. of Oncology, Copenhagen University Hospital Herlev, Borgmester Ib Juuls vej 1, DK-2730National Center for Cancer Immune Therapy, Dept. of Oncology, Copenhagen University Hospital Herlev, Borgmester Ib Juuls vej 1, DK-2730
Agency Class

Category of organization(s) involved as sponsor (and collaborator) supporting the trial.

Other
Overall Status Recruiting
Countries Denmark
Conditions

The disease, disorder, syndrome, illness, or injury that is being studied.

Metastatic Melanoma
Additional Details

Background: Huge advances have been made in the treatment of metastatic melanoma (MM) the past 5 years. Especially immunotherapy has shown promising results. Cancer cells are naturally attacked by cells of the immune system, but can induce a state of tolerance whereby they escape from immune attack. This escape is brought about by many mechanisms. An important one is the programmed death pathway (PD-1/PD-L1). PD-L1 is commonly overexpressed on cancer cells. Interaction of PD-1 on activated T cells and PD-L1 on cancer cells lead to inhibition of the cytotoxic T cells. Another important mechanism is through overexpression of the metabolic enzyme IDO on cancer cells. Activation of IDO also inhibits cytotoxic T cells. Investigators have recently identified spontaneous T cell reactivity against PD-L1 and IDO in the tumor microenvironment and in the peripheral blood of patients with MM and healthy donors. Both IDO and PD-L1 reactive CD8 T cells are cytotoxic and can kill cancer cells and immune regulatory cells in vitro.. Thus boosting specific T cells that recognize immune regulatory proteins such as IDO and PD-L1 may directly modulate immune regulation. Due to distinct mechanisms of action, the combination of treatment with a monoclonal antibody targeting PD-1 (Nivolumab) and a vaccine with peptides against PD-L1 and IDO may have a synergistic effect. Investigators have previously reported a phase I trial where, the IDO peptide was tested in 15 patients with MM in combination with Ipilimumab, and no grade 3-4 toxicity was seen. The PD-L1 peptide is currently being tested in a first-in-man study in patients with multiple myeloma. Methods: A two-step clinical phase I/II trial design will be used, starting out with a pilot study including 6 patients with MM to test feasibility and tolerability. If the treatment is found feasible the study will be extended to a phase II study with 24 patients. The objective is to describe anti-tumor immune responses and objective responses using RECIST 1.1. Patients will be treated with Nivolumab in accordance with standard regimen, which involves outpatient IV infusions every second week as long as there is clinical benefit. The PD-L1/IDO peptide vaccine is given from start of Nivolumab and every second week for the first 6 vaccines and thereafter every fourth week up to 1 year. 15 vaccines will be administered in total. Patients will be followed with clinical controls and diagnostic imaging every 12 weeks. Patients who receive all vaccines will have follow up after 3 and 6 months in parallel with standard of care treatment for Nivolumab.

Arms & Interventions

Arms

Experimental: Patient group

All patients receive the same treatment. Patients included in the protocol are treated with Nivolumab according to usual guidelines, implying outpatient IV infusions of 3 mg/kg biweekly until progression. The vaccine is administered on the same day as the administration start of Nivolumab. The vaccination is given biweekly for a total of 6 times, then every fourth week up to week 47, whereupon no additional vaccines will be given. In total, 15 vaccines will be administered. A vaccine consist of 100 μg IDO long peptide, 100 μg PD-L1 long1 peptide and 500 microliters Montanide as adjuvant. Patients who complete all vaccines will continue Nivolumab treatment after standard guidelines.

Interventions

Drug: - Nivolumab

Nivolumab 3 mg/kg is administered biweekly as long as there is clinical benefit.

Biological: - PD-L1/IDO peptide vaccine

The vaccine is administered biweekly for a total of 6 times, then every fourth week up to 47 weeks, whereupon no additional vaccinations will be given. A total of 15 vaccines will be administered. A vaccine consists of 100 μg PD-L1 long1 peptide, 100 μg IDO long peptide and 500 μl Montande as adjuvant.

Contact a Trial Team

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International Sites

Herlev Hospital, Herlev, Denmark

Status

Recruiting

Address

Herlev Hospital

Herlev, , 2730

Site Contact

Cathrine L Lorentzen, MD

[email protected]

+4538683868

Herlev, Denmark

Status

Recruiting

Address

National Center for Cancer Immune Therapy, Dept. of Oncology

Herlev, , 2730

Site Contact

Inge Marie Svane, Prof., MD

[email protected]

+4538683868

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