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Clinical Trial Summary

Underlying disease mechanisms are fundamental for correct treatment selection and patient management in highly invasive and debilitating non-transmissible diseases. Even though overall disease burden of cancer may have decreased due to a higher degree of awareness, the availability of high-quality healthcare and early diagnosis may become challenging in certain neoplasms. Cholangiocarcinoma is usually diagnosed at advanced stages due to non-specific presentation and is frequently refractory to chemotherapy, causing a massive impact on patients and their families. Surgery is currently the only curative treatment but is available to only approximately 30% of patients. The combination of interventional- and immune-oncology to standard of care creates the perfect substrate for synergistic mechanisms to fight tumor growth; in situ cell death following transarterial embolization(TARE) elicits immune mediated response, inflammatory response and biomarkers of oxidative stress and increases antigen presenting T-cells which an anti-anti progam death ligand (PD-L)1 can bind to; standard of care can then add on with its known effects.The rationale of a combined- locoregional and systemic - treatment lies in the synergistic effects of each of the treatments.


Clinical Trial Description

Tumors are highly selective and well defined abnormal cellular proliferations in which microenvironment plays an important role in response to treatment. Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA), a tumor derived from the epithelia cells of the bile duct, is particularly invasive and malignant. Personalized treatment options with documented efficacy in patients with iCCA are still not available due to the complex and heterogenous molecular pathogenesis which has not been holistically described. Disease models have limited reproducibility; underlying chronic cholestatic disease, chronic inflammation and risk factors contribute to the complexity and diversity of tumor microenvironment. Although novel systemic therapeutic agents show improvement compared to standard of care chemotherapy, a significant percentage of patients still does not respond to treatment, maybe due to molecular/immunologic features which confer resistance. Local treatment prior to systemic therapy has shown to induce subtle changes in the tumor microenvironment and a systemic immune response: engagement of the immune system may therefore lead to enhanced and long term immunosurveillance and therefore, lasting benefits for cancer patients. Combined systemic treatment with an anti PD-L1, that binds to the programmed cell death protein 1, and the standard of care (SOC) protein kinase inhibitor sorafenib and gemcitabine (which inhibits DNA synthesis), have been used in clinical trials for other primary liver indications and in patients with biliary tract cancers (TOPAZ trial). Radioembolization (TARE) combines the embolization properties of microspheres with the radiant effect of Yttrium-90 (Y-90). The locally treated tumor tissue is left in place and releases tumor-associated antigens and danger-associated molecular peptides originating from dead or dying cancer cells which promote the activation of antigen presenting cells and anti-tumor CD8+T cells. The resulting development of a systemic immune response following local treatment may lead to tumor regression at different sites than the one treated locally, leading to the so-called abscopal effect. Comprehensive evaluations in patients undergoing combined treatment may allow a better understanding of tumor pathophysiology as well as the optimization of combined treatment schemes. This study will investigate the efficacy, primary endpoint overall response rate according to mRECIST (modified Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors) , and safety of the association of locoregional radioembolization followed by the combination of standard of care (SOC) chemotherapy with Cisplatin and Gemcitabine and durvalumab in patients with liver predominant unresectable intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma. The biological profile of patients prior to and following locoregional treatment and the effect of systemic therapy will be characterized in terms of potential biomarkers such as quantitative non-invasive radiological based parameters, tumor tissue profiling and evaluation of biological substrates to help define and stratify patients with higher response and better outcome. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06375915
Study type Interventional
Source IRCCS San Raffaele
Contact
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase Phase 2
Start date April 2024
Completion date January 2026

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