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CTIM-27. AUTOLOGOUS TUMOR LYSATE-LOADED DENDRITIC CELL VACCINATION IMPROVES SURVIVAL IN PATIENTS WITH NEWLY DIAGNOSED AND RECURRENT GLIOBLASTOMA: SURVIVAL RESULTS FROM A PHASE 3 TRIAL

Authors :
Linda M Liau
Keyoumars Ashkan
Steven Brem
Jian Campian
John Trusheim
Fabio Iwamoto
David Tran
George Anstass
Charles Cobbs
Jason Heth
Michael Salacz
Stacy D'Andre
Robert Aiken
Yaron Moshel
JooYeon Nam
Clement Pillainayagam
Stephanie Wagner
Kevin Walter
Rekha Chaudary
Samuel Goldlust
Ian Lee
Daniela Bota
Heinrich Elinzano
Jai Grewal
Kevin Lillehei
Tom Mikkelsen
Tobias Walbert
Steve Abram
Andrew Brenner
Matthew Ewend
Simon Khagi
Darren Lovick
Jana Portnow
Lyndon Kim
William Loudon
Nina Martinez
Reid Thompson
David Avigan
Karen Fink
Francois Geoffroy
Pierre Giglio
Oleg Gligich
Dietmar Krex
Scott M Lindhorst
Jose Lutzky
Hans-Joerg Meisel
Minou Nadji-Ohl
Lhagva Sanchin
Andrew Sloan
Marnix Bosch
Source :
Neuro-Oncology. 24:vii66-vii66
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2022.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Standard of care (SOC) and patient survival in glioblastoma have changed little in the past 17 years. We evaluated in a phase 3 trial whether adding an autologous tumor lysate-loaded dendritic cell vaccine (murcidencel) to SOC extends survival. Patients and METHODS Newly diagnosed glioblastoma patients were randomized 2:1 to either murcidencel or placebo. Under a crossover design, all patients could receive murcidencel following tumor recurrence. All parties remained blinded regarding treatments before recurrence. Patients thus received murcidencel at new diagnosis (nGBM) or at recurrence (rGBM) following crossover from placebo. The primary and secondary endpoints compare overall survival (OS) with contemporaneous, matched external controls. Four sets of analyses were conducted to ensure rigorous matching of the controls, reduce biases, and confirm the robustness of the results. RESULTS 331 patients were enrolled. With the crossover, 89% received murcidencel. Median OS (mOS) for nGBM patients (n = 232) was 19.3 months from randomization (22.4 months from surgery) with murcidencel vs. 16.5 months from randomization in the controls (HR = 0.80, p = 0.002). Survival at 48 months from randomization was 15.7% vs. 9.9%, and at 60 months was 13% vs. 5.7%. For rGBM (n = 64), mOS was 13.2 months from relapse vs. 7.8 months in the controls (HR = 0.58, p < 0.001). Survival at 24 months post-recurrence was 20.7% vs. 9.6%, and at 30 months post-recurrence was 11.1% vs 5.1%. In nGBM patients with methylated MGMT (n = 90), mOS was 30.2 months from randomization (33 months from surgery) with murcidencel vs. 21.3 months from randomization in the controls (HR = 0.74, p = 0.027). The treatment was well tolerated, with only 5 serious adverse events deemed at least possibly related to the vaccine. CONCLUSION Clinically meaningful and statistically significant survival extension was seen in both nGBM and rGBM patients treated with murcidencel and SOC compared with contemporaneous, matched external controls who received SOC alone.

Details

ISSN :
15235866 and 15228517
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuro-Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........514ff36cbac4ed517d06fdef8e07d466