Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04632433 |
Other study ID # |
NEO-CESQ |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
Phase 2
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
February 10, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
February 1, 2026 |
Study information
Verified date |
January 2024 |
Source |
Fondazione Melanoma Onlus |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Neoadjuvant plus adjuvant treatment with immunotherapy may have an anti-tumor activity and
reduce the risk of relapse in patients with high risk surgically resectable stage III
cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma.
Description:
Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC) is the second most common skin cancer in US. It is
associated with a surgical cure rate >95% in early stage disease but a small percentage of
patients develop unresectable locally advanced or metastatic CSCC. The 2018 FDA approval of
Libtayo was based on a combined analysis of data from an open-label, multi-center,
non-randomized Phase 2 trial known as EMPOWER-CSCC-1 (Study 1540) and two advanced CSCC
expansion cohorts from a multi-center, open-label, non-randomized Phase 1 trial (Study 1423).
Conventional cytotoxic chemotherapy can induce tumor responses but is often poorly tolerated,
specially among older patients with CSCC. CSCC has higher mutation burden than any tumor type
and immunosuppression is a known risk factor. Furthermore, PD-L1 expression has been
associated with high risk disease1 suggesting that CSCC may be responsive to PD-1 checkpoint
blockade.
Cemiplimab is a human anti-PD-1 monoclonal antibody, under study for patients with
unresectable locally advanced and/or regionally or metastatic CSCC. It has been studied in a
phase I dose escalation, where a durable radiologic complete response was achieved in CSCC
patients.2-3 In this study, the partial response was 25% in locally advanced and 60% in
metastatic CSCC,stable disease was 31.3% in locally advanced and 10% in metastatic CSCC,
progressive disease was 25% in locally advanced and 20% in metastatic CSCC with an overall
response rate of 46.2% and a disease control rate of 69.2%. The 2018 FDA approval of Libtayo
was based on a combined analysis of data from an open-label, multi-center, non-randomized
Phase 2 trial known as EMPOWER-CSCC-1 (Study 1540) and two advanced CSCC expansion cohorts
from a multi-center, open-label, non-randomized Phase 1 trial (Study 1423). Together, the
trials represent the largest prospective data set in advanced CSCC. The major efficacy
outcome measures for the integrated analysis of EMPOWER-CSCC-1 and the two CSCC expansion
cohorts were confirmed objective response rate (ORR), as assessed by independent central
review (ICR), and ICR-assessed duration of response (DOR).
Across the entire population, the overall response rate (ORR) at a median follow-up of 8.9
months was 47% (95% CI, 38-47). The complete response (CR) rate was 4% and the partial
response (PR) rate was 44%. The duration of response ranged from 1 month to over 15 months.
Sixty-one percent of patients had a duration of response ≥6 months.
Among 75 patients with metastatic CSCC, the ORR was 47% (95% CI, 35-59). The CR rate was 5%
and the PR rate was 41%. The duration of response ranged from 3 months to over 15 months.
Sixty percent of patients had a duration of response ≥6 months. In the 33 patients with
locally advanced disease, the ORR was 49% (95% CI, 31-67), comprising all PRs. The duration
of response ranged from 1 month to over 13 months. Sixty-three percent of patients had a
duration of response ≥6 months.
Cemiplimab therefore produced rapid, deep and durable tumor reductions in target lesions.
Cemiplimab appears to be active regardless PD-L1 expressione in the tumor and no apparent
association between PD-L1 IHC results and objective responses was determined. Cemiplimab was
generally well tolerated in CSCC, and most commonly associated with fatigue (23.1%
prevalence), arthralgia, rash maculopapular, diarrhea, nausea, hypothyroidism (7.7%) of any
grade.
The advantage of neoadjuvant trials is the availability of blood and tumor tissue samples
before and after systemic therapy for the conduct of novel mechanistic and biomarker studies
in the circulation and the tumor microenvironment.
Based on the available results to date, the investigators aim to conduct a phase II single
arm trial to define the role of neoadjuvant plus adjuvant immunotherapy in patients with
stage III CSCC. This approach has the potential to define whether neoadjuvant treatment with
cemiplimab has antitumor activity and whether it reduces the risk of relapse after surgery.