Metastatic Melanoma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Immune Monitoring During Systemic Therapy of Metastatic Malignant Melanoma
The mean survival time in the advanced tumor stage in the presence of distant metastases in
malignant melanoma was less than 9 months until a few years ago. Intensive research efforts
have led to the development of promising new therapeutic strategies and their clinical
application. These include on the one hand mutation-specific inhibitors of important for cell
division serine-threonine kinase BRAF such as vemurafenib, dabrafenib and encorafenib and
inhibitors of the downstream target protein, the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase
(MEK), such as trametinib, binimetinib and cobimetinib.
The group of immunotherapeutics is a second new class of drugs, in which great hope for the
treatment of metastatic melanoma is placed. Antibody-mediated blockage of surface molecules
expressed on immune cells, referred to as immune checkpoints, results in activation of the
immune system. As a result, an anti-tumor immune response is triggered, which has led to
considerable therapeutic success in metastatic melanoma. To date, three checkpoint inhibitors
have been approved for the treatment of metastatic melanoma. Ipilimumab is an antibody that
binds cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA-4); Pembrolizumab and nivolumab cause
immune stimulation by binding the Programmed Death Receptor (PD1).
However, the impact of the therapy on the immune system as a whole is largely unknown. A
comprehensive understanding of these effects is crucial to be able to further develop the
therapy and to evaluate useful combination therapies with other immunomodulatory agents.
Within the framework of this project changes of the immune response under a systemic therapy
of the malignant melanoma are to be characterized. The material for the analysis comes from
blood samples collected during routine patient check-ups.
The aim of the analyzes is to precisely characterize the effects of the different
therapeutics on the function of the immune system. In particular, the study will investigate
whether certain therapeutic agents can weaken or activate the immune system and thus, in
addition to the direct effect on the tumor cells, mediate indirect therapeutic effects via
immune modulation. In the long term, the investigators want to use the knowledge gained to
further improve the already existing therapeutic strategies of malignant melanoma by
additional modulation of the immune system.
Despite recent breakthroughs in the treatment of melanoma, the prognosis in the advanced
stage of the disease continues to be very poor. 45-50% of all melanomas carry a point
mutation in codon 600 of the BRAF gene encoding a serine-threonine kinase. The two most
common BRAF mutations (V600E and V600K) constitutively activate the MAP kinase signaling
pathway that drives the proliferation and survival of cancer cells. Specific BRAF V600
inhibitors such as vemurafenib, dabrafenib and encorafenib and inhibitors of the downstream
target MEK such as trametinib, binimetinib and cobimetinib are very effective regimens in
BRAF-positive metastatic melanoma.
Recent studies have shown that these inhibitors in addition to the effects on the tumor cells
also have an influence on cells of the immune system. For example, vemurafenib leads to a
loss of peripheral blood lymphocytes. Thus, the number of peripheral CD4 + positive cells
decreases with vemurafenib therapy, while the number of natural killer cells (NK cells)
increases. On the other hand, initial studies show that B cells and CD8 + positive cells are
not affected numerically by vemurafenib. It has been demonstrated that vemurafenib but not
dabrafenib reduces the number of peripheral lymphocytes in melanoma patients and changes the
function and phenotype of CD4 + positive cells, although both drugs show comparable clinical
efficacy. Selective inhibition of BRAF by inhibitors such as vemurafenib or dabrafenib thus
has a significant influence on the peripheral lymphocyte populations of melanoma patients.
Studies have been demonstrated that inhibition of BRAF can induce increased invasion of
tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes into melanoma metastases. Tumor infiltration of CD4 + and CD8
+ positive lymphocytes is surprisingly enhanced by therapy with a BRAF inhibitor.
Furthermore, it could be shown in this study that the number of immunoreactive cells
correlated with a reduction in tumor size and an increased necrosis in the tumor areas. The
data obtained so far suggest that treatment with BRAF inhibitors increases melanoma antigen
expression and thus facilitates T cell cytotoxicity. This results in a more favorable tumor
microenvironment for a synergistic BRAF-targeted therapy and immunotherapy. This therapeutic
strategy is currently being evaluated in clinical trials.
The group of immunotherapeutics is a second new class of drugs, in which great hope for the
treatment of metastatic melanoma is placed. Ipilimumab is an antibody that binds the
cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA-4), thereby stimulating T-cell activation
and proliferation. The drug has been approved for the treatment of metastatic melanoma since
July 2011 and significantly increases survival in some patients. In addition, at the end of
2015, a monoclonal antibody directed against the Programmed Death Receptor (PD1) was approved
by the European Medicines Commission for the treatment of unresectable or metastatic
melanoma. PD1 is a receptor that is expressed on T cells and inhibits T cell activation upon
binding of a ligand. Study results have shown that blocking this T-cell inhibition with PD1
or PD-L1 antagonists is a very effective therapeutic strategy for melanoma and other tumor
entities.
Current data show that targeted therapy has a major impact on the tumor microenvironment and
on the regulatory and effector cells of the immune system. However, the impact of the therapy
on the immune system as a whole is largely unknown. A comprehensive understanding of these
effects is crucial to be able to further develop the therapy and to evaluate useful
combination therapies with other immunomodulatory agents.
In the context of this study, the immune status, e.g. the number and the activation state of
different immune cells at the beginning and in the course of a systemic therapy for
metastatic melanoma should be determined. For this purpose, 10 ml of EDTA blood is taken as
part of the guideline-compliant routine care (The blood samples taken in the study are given
every 4 weeks for therapy with kinase inhibitors and every 2 weeks for therapy with
checkpoint inhibitors). The blood samples taken before and during therapy will be analyzed by
flow cytometry and the changes in the immunophenotype will be correlated with the response to
therapy. In this way, the investigator want to identify both predictive and prognostic
markers. The assessment of the immune status should help to optimize the effectiveness of
melanoma therapy. Therefore, it would be important to identify suitable markers and to
characterize subgroups of immune cells that have an impact on the tumor microenvironment.
The evaluation of the immune status in melanoma patients could thus be incorporated into the
treatment strategies in the future in order to combine a targeted therapy with
immunomodulating substances or also from enriched sub-populations of immune cells in order to
increase the effectiveness of the treatment.
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