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Activation of immune responses in patients with relapsed-metastatic head and neck cancer (CONFRONT phase I-II trial): Multimodality immunotherapy with avelumab, short-course radiotherapy, and cyclophosphamide

Authors :
Marco Merlano
Stefania Vecchio
Elvio G. Russi
Nerina Denaro
Renzo Corvò
Elena Fea
Paola Curcio
Anna Merlotti
Claudia Fruttero
Danilo Galizia
Massimo Di Maio
Lisa Licitra
Source :
Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology, Vol 12, Iss, Pp 47-52 (2018), Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Highlights • Treatment of relapsed/metastatic head and neck cancer is unclear. • Cyclophosphamide, avelumab, and radiotherapy may be effective for R/M-HNC. • Combined treatment may improve avelumab activity without increasing its toxicity. • Ongoing trials will clarify the potential of immunotherapy in RM-HNC patients.<br />Introduction and background Second-line treatment of platinum-resistant relapsed/metastatic (R/M) head and neck cancer (HNC) is a currently unmet clinical need. Clinical trials showed improvement in overall survival and quality of life of R/M-HNC patients treated with anti-PD-1 regardless of the number of prior chemotherapy lines; however, the percentage of long-term survivors remains limited. This study aims to test the hypothesis that attacking the tumor microenvironment at multiple levels can increase immunogenicity of R/M-HNC without worsening the safety profile of immune checkpoint inhibitors. Methods/design In this open label, multi-center, single-arm, Phase Ib/II, R/M-HNC patients pretreated with at least one line of therapy containing platinum, fluorouracil, and cetuximab will receive a daily metronomic dose of 50 mg cyclophosphamide without a drug-free break, 10 mg/kg avelumab on day 1 and every other week until progression, and a single fraction of 8 Gy radiotherapy on day 8. Discussion The treatment protocol aims to reverse immune evasion of the tumor through a radiotherapy-induced self-vaccination effect, suppression of CD4+ CD25+ FoxP3+ regulatory T-cell function by metronomic cyclophosphamide, and effector T-cell reactivation owing to the inhibition of the PD-1–PD-L1 axis by avelumab. The immunologic interplay induced by the proposed combined treatment may theoretically improve the activity of avelumab without increasing its toxicity profile. Finally, an ancillary translational study will be extended to all the patients’ population. Trial registration EudraCT n. 2017-000353-39.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology, Vol 12, Iss, Pp 47-52 (2018), Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5821918a03354fca9ea0dff4f1e51733