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Electrochemotherapy as a First Line Treatment in Recurrent Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Oral Cavity and Oropharynx PDL-1 Negative and/or with Evident Contraindication to Immunotherapy: A Randomized Multicenter Controlled Trial.

Authors :
Perri, Francesco
Longo, Francesco
Fusco, Roberta
D'Alessio, Valeria
Aversa, Corrado
Pavone, Ettore
Pontone, Monica
Marciano, Maria Luisa
Villano, Salvatore
Franco, Pierluigi
Togo, Giulia
Fazio, Gianluca Renato De
Ordano, Daniele
Maglitto, Fabio
Salzano, Giovanni
Maglione, Maria Grazia
Guida, Agostino
Ionna, Franco
Baldi, Alfonso
Source :
Cancers; May2021, Vol. 13 Issue 9, p2210-2210, 1p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Simple Summary: A large number of patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) have an advanced-stage disease (stages III to IVB) that do not respond to therapy despite aggressive, site-specific multimodality therapy and most of them will develop disease recurrence. This is the description of a phase IIb randomized multicenter trial that involves the enrolment of 96 patients. The aim of the study is to verify whether electrochemotherapy performed with bleomycin of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) relapses of the oral cavity and oropharynx is able to lead to an increase in the objective response rate in comparison with the systemic treatment with cetuximab + platinum-based therapy + 5-fluorouracil. The primary objective is to verify the objective response rate of patients in the control arm compared to the treatment arm. Background: A significant proportion of patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) have advanced-stage disease (stages III to IVB) that do not respond to therapy despite aggressive, site-specific multimodality therapy. A great number of them will develop disease recurrence, with up to 60% risk of local failure and up to 30% risk of distant failure. Therapy can be very demanding for the patient especially when important anatomical structures are involved. For these reasons, therapies that preserve organ functionality in combination with effective local tumor control, like electrochemotherapy (ECT), are of great interest. Until few months ago, systemic cetuximab + platinum-based therapy + 5-fluorouracil represented the standard treatment for HNSCC relapses with a median overall survival of 10.1 months and an objective response rate of 36%. Recently the results of KEYNOTE-048 study were published and a new combination of monoclonal antibody named pembrolizumab and chemotherapy emerged as standard first line therapy of recurrent or metastatic tumor that overexpress tissue PDL-1 (Programmed Death 1 ligand). Nevertheless, a variable percentage from 10 to 15% of patients with recurrent/metastatic disease have a tumor that does not overexpress tissue PDL-1, and therefore, according to the results of the KEYNOTE-048 study, does not benefit from replacement of cetuximab with pembrolizumab. These patients will be treated with the "gold standard": cetuximab, cisplatin/carboplatin and 5-fluorouracil. Aim: To verify whether electrochemotherapy performed with bleomycin of HNSCC relapses of the oral cavity and oropharynx (single relapse on T) is able to lead to an increase in the objective response rate in comparison with the systemic treatment with cetuximab + platinum-based therapy + 5-fluorouracil in patients with PDL-1 negative tumors. Methods: The phase IIb study involves the enrolment of 96 patients who meet the inclusion criteria (48 in the control arm and 48 in the treatment arm). The control arm involves the treatment of HNSCC with systemic treatment (cetuximab + platinum-based therapy + 5-fluorouracil). The treatment arm involves the ECT with bleomycin. The primary objective is to verify the objective response rate of patients in the control arm compared to the treatment arm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
13
Issue :
9
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
150367974
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13092210