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First results on survival from a large Phase 3 clinical trial of an autologous dendritic cell vaccine in newly diagnosed glioblastoma.

Authors :
Liau LM
Ashkan K
Tran DD
Campian JL
Trusheim JE
Cobbs CS
Heth JA
Salacz M
Taylor S
D'Andre SD
Iwamoto FM
Dropcho EJ
Moshel YA
Walter KA
Pillainayagam CP
Aiken R
Chaudhary R
Goldlust SA
Bota DA
Duic P
Grewal J
Elinzano H
Toms SA
Lillehei KO
Mikkelsen T
Walbert T
Abram SR
Brenner AJ
Brem S
Ewend MG
Khagi S
Portnow J
Kim LJ
Loudon WG
Thompson RC
Avigan DE
Fink KL
Geoffroy FJ
Lindhorst S
Lutzky J
Sloan AE
Schackert G
Krex D
Meisel HJ
Wu J
Davis RP
Duma C
Etame AB
Mathieu D
Kesari S
Piccioni D
Westphal M
Baskin DS
New PZ
Lacroix M
May SA
Pluard TJ
Tse V
Green RM
Villano JL
Pearlman M
Petrecca K
Schulder M
Taylor LP
Maida AE
Prins RM
Cloughesy TF
Mulholland P
Bosch ML
Source :
Journal of translational medicine [J Transl Med] 2018 May 29; Vol. 16 (1), pp. 142. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 May 29.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: Standard therapy for glioblastoma includes surgery, radiotherapy, and temozolomide. This Phase 3 trial evaluates the addition of an autologous tumor lysate-pulsed dendritic cell vaccine (DCVax <superscript>®</superscript> -L) to standard therapy for newly diagnosed glioblastoma.<br />Methods: After surgery and chemoradiotherapy, patients were randomized (2:1) to receive temozolomide plus DCVax-L (n = 232) or temozolomide and placebo (n = 99). Following recurrence, all patients were allowed to receive DCVax-L, without unblinding. The primary endpoint was progression free survival (PFS); the secondary endpoint was overall survival (OS).<br />Results: For the intent-to-treat (ITT) population (n = 331), median OS (mOS) was 23.1 months from surgery. Because of the cross-over trial design, nearly 90% of the ITT population received DCVax-L. For patients with methylated MGMT (n = 131), mOS was 34.7 months from surgery, with a 3-year survival of 46.4%. As of this analysis, 223 patients are ≥ 30 months past their surgery date; 67 of these (30.0%) have lived ≥ 30 months and have a Kaplan-Meier (KM)-derived mOS of 46.5 months. 182 patients are ≥ 36 months past surgery; 44 of these (24.2%) have lived ≥ 36 months and have a KM-derived mOS of 88.2 months. A population of extended survivors (n = 100) with mOS of 40.5 months, not explained by known prognostic factors, will be analyzed further. Only 2.1% of ITT patients (n = 7) had a grade 3 or 4 adverse event that was deemed at least possibly related to the vaccine. Overall adverse events with DCVax were comparable to standard therapy alone.<br />Conclusions: Addition of DCVax-L to standard therapy is feasible and safe in glioblastoma patients, and may extend survival. Trial registration Funded by Northwest Biotherapeutics; Clinicaltrials.gov number: NCT00045968; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00045968?term=NCT00045968&rank=1 ; initially registered 19 September 2002.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1479-5876
Volume :
16
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of translational medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29843811
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-018-1507-6