Malignant Glioma of Brain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Phase 1 Study in Humans Evaluating the Safety of Rectus Sheath Implantation of Diffusion Chambers Encapsulating Autologous Malignant Glioma Cells Treated With Insulin-Like Growth Factor Receptor-1 Antisense Oligodeoxynucleotide in 12 Patients With Recurrent Malignant Glioma
This human Phase I trial involves taking the patient's own tumor cells during surgical
craniotomy, treating them with an investigational new drug (an antisense molecule) designed
to shut down a targeted surface receptor protein, and re-implanting the cells, now
encapsulated in small diffusion chambers the size of a dime in the patient's abdomen within
24 hours after the surgery. Loss of the surface receptor causes the tumor cells to die in a
process called apoptosis. As the tumor cells die, they release small particles called
exosomes, each full of tumor antigens. It is believed that these exosomes as well as the
presence of the antisense molecule work together to activate the immune system against the
tumor as they slowly diffuse out of the chamber. This combination product therefore serves as
a slow-release antigen depot. Immune cells are immediately available for activation outside
of the chamber because a wound was created to implant these tumor cells and a foreign body
(the chamber) is present in the wound. The wound and the chamber fortify the initial immune
response which eventually leads to the activation of immune system T cells that attack and
eliminate the tumor. By training the immune system to recognize the tumor, the patient is
also protected through immune surveillance from later tumor growth should the tumor recur.
Compared to the other immunotherapy strategies, this treatment marshalls the native immune
system (specifically the antigen presenting cells, or dendritic cells) rather than
engineering the differentiation of these immune cells and re-injecting them. Compared to
traditional treatment alternatives for tumor recurrence, including a boost of further
radiation and more chemotherapy, this treatment represents potentially greater benefit with
fewer risks.
This combination product serves as a therapeutic vaccine with an acceptable safety profile,
which activates an anti-tumor adaptive immune response resulting in radiographic tumor
regression.
This trial will be an adaptation and continuation of a previously published trial,
reproducing the original study size of 12 patients. Modifications from the previous trial
include a modified oligodeoxynucleotide sequence and treatment at initial diagnosis, which
would occur with concomitant standard therapy in an additional Phase 1 trial as a
continuation if no rate-limiting toxicity is noted in the original Phase 1 arm. For practical
purposes, a standard Phase 1 dose-escalation study is not possible with the current paradigm.
Although we may have identified a distinct bioactive byproduct of IGF-1R/AS ODN-induced tumor
cell apoptosis (exosomes), it is difficult to perform a dose escalation in a typical fashion.
Also, antigen concentration can affect immune response in a biphasic manner: too little or
too much can dampen an immune response, so even if the antigen or antigens were known, a
typical pharmacologic dose escalation would not follow typical pharmacokinetics. For these
reasons, we have designed a follow-on Phase 1 arm in which 32 patients will have therapy at
initial surgery in 4 cohorts of 8 patients each. We will vary chamber number and implantation
duration for each of the four cohorts in the additional Phase 1 arm. When we documented an
increase in tumor infiltrating lymphocytes after treatment in our original trial, this
observation provided preliminary supporting evidence that this therapeutic vaccine will
elicit an adaptive immune response. We have designed the Phase 1 arm to further elucidate an
immune response with a quantitative assessment of tumor specific T cells as well as
circulating M2 macrophages before and after treatment. The design of the Phase 1 phase of the
trial will allow a statistical analysis of both antigen dose (number of chambers) and time of
exposure (chamber dwell time) as either variable may relate to any toxicity or treatment
response.
A summary of the treatment paradigm includes: Pre-operative plasma leukopheresis, then
surgery with tissue harvest and implantation of up to 10 chambers in the rectus sheath with
IGF-1R/AS ODN as previously reported within 24 hours of craniotomy plus one chamber
containing only phosphate buffered saline. Twelve patients treated for recurrent disease will
be assessed for safety of the treatment. If the safety profile is acceptable, the trial will
be followed by accrual of 32 patients in an additional Phase 1 trial as a continuation over
approximately 3 years prospectively from Thomas Jefferson University Hospital and the
Jefferson Hospital for Neuroscience. All patients who meet the eligibility criteria and agree
to participate in this study will be potential candidates for therapy.
Pre-Operative Preparation - Patients will consent to a plasma leukopheresis at least 3 days
prior to elective craniotomy. The PBMC will be stored for subsequent analysis of T cell
responses, the presence of IL-10-producing M2 macrophages, and dendritic cell (DC)
preparation. ELISPOT assays will be performed to measure T cell responses to autologous tumor
cells and allogeneic tumor cells (U118 tumor lysate) utilizing cross-primed DC to assess both
native anti-glioma immunity any acquired immunity after treatment. If U118 allogeneic glioma
cells elicit a CTL response, this cell line may serve as an antigen source for future serial
vaccination protocols.
A pre-operative PET scan as a baseline against which we can compare post-treatment PET scans
as indicated.
Surgery and Tumor Cell Retrieval - Craniotomy and MRI-based image guided tumor resection will
be performed on all study patients by an experienced neurosurgeon . All tested malignant
gliomas obtained from craniotomies performed at Thomas Jefferson University have expressed
the IGF-1R (M. Resnicoff, personal communication). During resection, viable tumor tissue will
be confirmed by pathologic examination of frozen sections, and then sent to a BL-2 facility
for disaggregation and plating in culture. Permanent section analysis will include an IGF-1R
immunostain to determine the presence of IGF-1R. Once the cells are attached, cells will
immediately be treated with IGF-1R/AS ODN. Tumor cells will be incubated with IGF-1R/AS ODN
for a maximum of 6 hours and 106 cells will be then be loaded into each chamber and a target
maximum of 10 chambers prepared. For all combination lot productions, two additional
irradiated chambers and 300 ul of treated autologous tumor cells will be sent to microbiology
for assessment of sterility according to FDA requirements. Greater than 5 and less than 10
chambers will be scored as a minor protocol violation. Recovery of no viable cells will be
grounds for disenrollment from the protocol. Prior to implantation, the chambers will be
irradiated with 5 Gy of X-irradiation as previously described. An additional tumor sample
will be flash-frozen for exploratory research objectives. At the time of craniotomy the
surgeon will create an abdominal acceptor site for subsequent diffusion chamber implantation
in the rectus sheath. This implantation site was chosen for the following reasons: (1) it
yielded objective favorable biological responses in the prior human Phase 1 trial; (2) this
site will easily accommodate multiple chamber implantations; (3) this site should elicit a
strong host response due to the extent of the wound, the introduction of a foreign body and
its contents, the vasculature of the rectus sheath and muscle, and the favorable inguinal
node lymphatic drainage from this site; and (4) exposure of the rectus sheath and muscle is
familiar to neurosurgeons all of whom commonly perform ventricular-peritoneal shunts.
Biodiffusion Chamber Implantation/Explantation - Autologous tumor cell preparation,
encapsulation in the biodiffusion chambers, irradiation, and chamber
implantation/explantation are all procedures detailed in the Standard Operating Procedures
Manual for IND #14379 (SOP 001). Briefly, at bedside in the intensive care unit the patient
is sedated with intravenous Midazolam (Versed, 0.05 mg/kg repeated every 2 - 3 minutes to
adequate sedation up to a maximum dose of 0.2mg/kg) and and Fentanyl (Sublimaze, 5mg which
may be repeated every 5 minutes to a maximum dose of 20mg) and the wound infiltrated with up
to 30 cc of 0.5% bupivicaine. With appropriate local anesthesia and sedation, the wound
prepared at surgery is re-opened through the rectus sheath and up to 10 chambers are
implanted between the rectus sheath and rectus muscle. The sheath is then re-approximated
with 2-0 vicryl sutures and the skin re-approximated with 3-0 nylon sutures.The 24 hour
period of implantation was chosen based on the favorable safety profile and promising
biological responses noted in the previous human Phase 1 trial. Explantation involves the
same process the following day with chamber explantation and a four layer wound closure.
Follow-up MRI imaging schedule The MRI studies at days 28 and 56 are acknowledged as not
being done as standard of care because they would not reflect meaningful clinical data if
patients received only standard of care treatment. The first surveillance MRIs are usually
obtained around 3 months after surgery or other interventions such as radiation or
chemotherapy. After this experimental treatment, however, we anticipate radiographic
responses much earlier as documented in the prior human trial. In the prior trial, partial or
complete radiographic responses were documented anywhere from 2 to 27 weeks after treatment.
We interpret these early responses to be a reflection of an immune-mediated biological
response.
Follow-up PET imaging schedule PET scans are scheduled at the discretion of the investigator
to confirm disease progression.
Retreatment of Subjects will be considered for an anticipated subgroup of subjects initially
participating in this protocol who have demonstrated immunocompetent responses associated
with objective clinical and radiographic improvements after induction vaccination.
Specifically, if serial assessments of T cell numbers and associated inflammatory cytokines,
interferon, the INF-responsive cytokines CXCL9, CXCL10, and interleukin 6 are significantly
elevated and associated with clinical and radiographic improvement.
Subjects entering the retreatment phase of the protocol will follow the same treatment plan
with the exception of pre-operative plasma leukopheresis. Plasma leukopheresis previously
collected will be utilized.
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