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Rationale and Design of a Phase 1 Clinical Trial to Evaluate HSV G207 Alone or with a Single Radiation Dose in Children with Progressive or Recurrent Malignant Supratentorial Brain Tumors.

Authors :
Waters AM
Johnston JM
Reddy AT
Fiveash J
Madan-Swain A
Kachurak K
Bag AK
Gillespie GY
Markert JM
Friedman GK
Source :
Human gene therapy. Clinical development [Hum Gene Ther Clin Dev] 2017 Mar; Vol. 28 (1), pp. 7-16.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Primary central nervous system tumors are the most common solid neoplasm of childhood and the leading cause of cancer-related death in pediatric patients. Survival rates for children with malignant supratentorial brain tumors are poor despite aggressive treatment with combinations of surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy, and survivors often suffer from damaging lifelong sequelae from current therapies. Novel innovative treatments are greatly needed. One promising new approach is the use of a genetically engineered, conditionally replicating herpes simplex virus (HSV) that has shown tumor-specific tropism and potential efficacy in the treatment of malignant brain tumors. G207 is a genetically engineered HSV-1 lacking genes essential for replication in normal brain cells. Safety has been established in preclinical investigations involving intracranial inoculation in the highly HSV-sensitive owl monkey (Aotus nancymai), and in three adult phase 1 trials in recurrent/progressive high-grade gliomas. No dose-limiting toxicities were seen in the adult studies and a maximum tolerated dose was not reached. Approximately half of the 35 treated adults had radiographic or neuropathologic evidence of response at a minimum of one time point. Preclinical studies in pediatric brain tumor models indicate that a variety of pediatric tumor types are highly sensitive to killing by G207. This clinical protocol outlines a first in human children study of intratumoral inoculation of an oncolytic virus via catheters placed directly into recurrent or progressive supratentorial malignant tumors.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2324-8645
Volume :
28
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Human gene therapy. Clinical development
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28319448
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/humc.2017.002