Vitiligo Clinical Trial
Official title:
Defining the Role of the Skin Microbiome in Vitiligo and Immune-related Adverse Events in Advanced Melanoma Patients Treated With Anti-PD1
The skin microbiome has been implicated in several cutaneous autoimmune pathologies such as psoriasis and atopic dermatitis. However, its role in vitiligo and vitiligo lesions occuring in patients receiving anti-PD-1 for metastatic melanoma
Melanoma is the most dangerous skin cancer accounting for the highest skin cancer deaths. The prognosis for metastatic melanoma has improved considerably in recent years thanks to advances in the field of immunotherapy. The development of molecules blocking certain immunological "checkpoints" (checkpoints exerted by the CTLA-4 (Cytotoxic T lymphocytes Associated protein 4) and PD-1 (Programmed cell Death protein 1) has made it possible to obtain a significant improvement of the overall survival (OS) of patients treated for metastatic melanoma. Ipilimumab, an antibody blocking CTLA-4, is the first immunotherapy marketed, demonstrating for the first time a therapeutic response, however in a small number of patients (10 to 15%) and with significant toxicity (25% of grade 3-4). Subsequently, a second generation of more effective checkpoint blockers (30 to 40% good response) and less toxic, anti-PD-1 antibodies (pembrolizumab and nivolumab), quickly obtained a marketing authorization in the first line treatment of metastatic melanoma treatment and recently in an adjuvant situation after lymph node dissection in order to limit the risk of recurrence. However, despite these advances, a certain number of patients do not respond to treatment and it remains difficult to predict this therapeutic response. Furthermore, patients treated with ICI often experience cutaneous immune-related adverse events manifesting as skin rash, dermatitis, epidermal necrolysis, and in some cases as vitiligo like depigmentation of the skin, testifying to the development of a specific immunogenicity towards the melanocytes, cells causing melanoma, and responsible for a discoloration of the skin. Several studies have reported that a modification of certain bacteria in the digestive microbiota was predictive of the antitumor response to immunotherapy, while others were predictive of the appearance of significant autoimmune ICI-related toxicities (colitis). Several phase 1 studies have evaluated the impact of taking probiotics or fecal transplants on the tumor response of patients receiving immunotherapy for cancer (NCT 03819296; NCT03817125; NCT03643289). Thus by these new concepts, it would be interesting to assess the composition of the skin microbiota in patients treated with anti-PD-1 immunotherapy for the management of metastatic melanoma and developing during their follow-up vitiligo; predictive side effect of improved survival. These data will be compared to those obtained from patients with common vitiligo. This will be examined in patients skin swabs sampled at lesional and non-lesional sites. Functionally, we will characterize the microbial pathways using shotgun sequencing of microbial genomes and meta-transcriptomics (RNA sequencing of microbial communities of the skin). ;
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