Cervix Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Phase I Study of the Anti-PD1 Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Pembrolizumab And Platinum in Combination With Radical radiotherApY in Cervix cAncer.
Locally advanced cervix cancers (stage 1B-IV) are usually treated with radiotherapy, concomitant cisplatin chemotherapy and brachytherapy. Failure to achieve locoregional control (LRC) remains a problem, especially in the setting of stage III/IV disease. More importantly, however, the dominant unresolved problem remains the occurrence of distant metastatic relapse. With the knowledge that 99% of all cervix cancer is associated with human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, there is a strong rationale to consider immunomodulatory strategies in the radical management of this disease. Therefore, in this research protocol the investigator will treat patients with stage 1B-IVA carcinoma of the cervix planned to receive radical radiotherapy with concomitant cisplatin and brachytherapy. The research involves adding a new therapy in the form of an antiPD1 monoclonal antibody (pembrolizumab) to the standard treatment of radiotherapy combined with cisplatin chemotherapy and brachytherapy. This treatment seeks to activate the patient's own immune system to attack the cancer cells - and the investigator believes that adding this treatment during standard treatment may be particularly effective. Patients will receive an initial dose of pembrolizumab 2 weeks before starting a course of chemoradiotherapy and brachytherapy. In the first instance, patients will receive 100 mg of pembrolizumab and, if this is safe and tolerable in the first 3 patients, the dose will be increased to 200 mg for all other patients. Radiation will be delivered on 28 occasions with chemotherapy given intravenously in weeks 0, 1, 2 and 3. Brachytherapy will be given on 3 occasions after completion of the radiation. Additional doses of pembrolizumab will be given every 3 weeks for a further 7 doses. The investigator will assess the feasibility and safety of the combination of pembrolizumab with radiotherapy and cisplatin.
The study is designed to determine the safest dosage of pembrolizumab to be given in
combination with chemoradiotherapy and brachytherapy for patients with locally advanced
cervix cancer. The study will be run at the Royal Marsden Hospital only and is open label so
both patient and doctor will know what treatment patients are receiving. Patients will
receive pembrolizumab in combination with chemoradiotherapy and brachytherapy. Patients will
be tested against 2 dose escalation levels (Dose Level 1/2). An initial dose of 100mg of
pembrolizumab will be implemented. If dose limiting toxicity is not observed at this dose,
pembrolizumab will be escalated to 200mg. A minimum of 3 patients will be required at each
dose level. A minimum gap of 1 week should be left between the recruitment of the first and
second patient in a new dosing level to mitigate against multiple patients suffering from any
acute toxicity.
- If no dose limiting toxicity is observed at a dose level, pembrolizumab will be
escalated to the next dosing level.
- If 1 in 3patients experience a dose limiting toxicity then the cohort will be expanded
to 6 patients.
- If 1 in 6 patients experience a DLT then the dose will be escalated to the next dosing
level.
- However if ≥ 2 in 6 patients experience a DLT then the maximum administered dose
(MAD)will have been reached and the previous dosing level should be used for the
expansion phase. If the MAD is reached at dose level 1 the combination therapy of
pembrolizumab, cisplatin and radiotherapy will not be considered possible and the trial
discontinued. Once the MTD has been determined the trial enters the expansion cohort
whereby a further 14 patients are treated with the determined dosage of pembrolizumab in
combination with radiotherapy, brachytherapy and cisplatin. For this study the dose
limiting toxicities will be assessed by the presence of:
- >=Grade 3 gastrointestinal toxicity
o Excluding grade 3 toxicity which resolves to grade 2 within 48 hours of medical
management
- Haematological toxicity including:
- Grade 3 thrombocytopenia with bleeding
- Grade 4 thrombocytopenia
- Grade 4 neutropenia lasting >7 days in the absence of growth factor support
- Grade 4 neutropenia of any duration accompanied by fever ≥ 38.5°C and/or systemic
infection
- Any other grade ≥4 haematological toxicity
- Immune system toxicity
- Grade 4 immune toxicity requiring treatment with corticosteroids
- Grade 3 immune toxicity requiring corticosteroid treatment (greater than 10 mg/day
prednisone or equivalent dose) for greater than 12 weeks. (For patients requiring
corticosteroids at week 12 toxicity assessment, the observation period will be
continued to monitor for this DLT)
- Radiotherapy treatment interruption > 5 days or failure to complete external beam
radiotherapy and brachytherapy due to toxicity
- any other ≥Grade 3 non-hematologic toxicity (except nausea and vomiting) which in the
opinion of the investigator is considered dose-limiting.
Escalation to the next dose level will not proceed until the following criteria are
satisfied:
- If 0/3 patients experience a DLT escalation to the next dose level can proceed.
- If 1/3 patients experiences a DLT a further 3 patients will be recruited at the dose
level.
- If 1/6 patients experience a DLT then escalation to the next dose level can
proceed.
- If ≥ 2/6 patients in a specific dose level experience a DLT, the maximum tolerated
dose will have been reached and all patients in the expansion cohort will be
recruited at the previous dose level.
- If 2/3patients experience a DLT then the maximum tolerated dose will have been reached
and the expansion cohort phase will begin at the previous dose level. If the MAD occurs
at dose level 1 the expansion cohort will not go ahead and the trial will be stopped.
Patient Pathway through the Study: Once the patient consents to taking part on the trial the
patient will enter the screening period. This can last from 1 to 14 days before the proposed
start of the study treatment. As part of the screening period the patient will be required to
attend a clinic where a doctor will complete a physical examination, assess the patients'
vital signs and performance status, measure the patients' weight and collect information on
the patients' medical history and any medications the patient is currently taking. Patients
will also be asked to undertake routine blood tests and a MRI/PET-CT scan; if these have been
completed as part of routine care; prior to consent and within the screening time lines; the
results can be used for the study. Female patients will be asked to complete a pregnancy test
up to 72 hours before confirmation of study eligibility. If the patient is confirmed as
eligible then the patient will be receive a preloading dose of pembrolizumab (at the dosage
currently under evaluation) 2 weeks prior to the start of chemoradiotherapy and then every 3
weeks until the patients have completed all 7 cycles, the patient disease progresses, the
patient suffers from too many side effects or the patient decides they no longer wish to take
part in the study. Whilst on treatment at each clinic visit before the drug is given the
patient will also be required to attend a clinic so the doctor can complete a physical
examination, assess the patients' vital signs and performance status, measure the patients'
weight and collect information on any side effects the patient may have and any medications
the patient is taking. At this visit the patient may also be required to give blood for
routine blood tests and research blood samples if the patient have consented to do this. Once
all the above assessments have been verified by the doctor Pembrolizumab will be given by a
drip into the patients' arm that will take approximately 30 minutes. Patients will also be
asked to attend a visit for a MRI/PET-CT at pre-brachytherapy (week 5), after the last dose
of pembrolizumab (week 18) and then every 3 months for 2 years or until disease progression,
discontinuation or initiation of another anticancer treatment. This is to see what is
happening to the cancer as the patient continues on the study. FollowUp: When a patient
completes their last dose of pembrolizumab the patient will be asked to attend post treatment
follow up visit 4 weeks after their last dose of pembrolizumab and a safety follow up at 19
weeks from their last dose or before the initiation of a new anti-cancer therapy; whichever
comes first. At the post treatment follow up visit and SFU visit the doctor will complete a
physical examination, assess the patient vital signs and performance status, measure the
patient weight and collect information on the patients' cancer, any side effects the patient
may have and any medications the patient is taking. Patients will also have routine bloods
taken. If the patient has completed all 8 doses and has not progressed at the safety
follow-up (SFU) the patient will be reviewed for tumour progression and initiation of new
anti-cancer treatments every 12 weeks for 2 years to review the disease status and if the
patients have received any additional anticancer treatments until progression, initiation of
a new anti-cancer therapy, withdrawal or completion of the study.
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