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First-in-human, phase 1 study of PF-06753512, a vaccine-based immunotherapy regimen (VBIR), in non-metastatic hormone-sensitive biochemical recurrence and metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC)

Authors :
Tian Zhang
Nicholas J Vogelzang
Daniel P Petrylak
Ravi A Madan
Karen A Autio
Ray Li
Helen Cho
Szu-Yu Tang
Celestia S Higano
Luke Nordquist
Leonard J Appleman
Xin-Hua Zhu
Hani Babiker
Sandip M Prasad
Michael T Schweizer
Stephane Billotte
Nora Cavazos
Orlaith Bogg
Kam Chan
Megan Kaneda
I-Ming Wang
Jenny Zheng
Robert Hollingsworth
Kenneth A Kern
Source :
Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer, Vol 11, Iss 3 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2023.

Abstract

Background This phase 1 study evaluated PF-06753512, a vaccine-based immunotherapy regimen (PrCa VBIR), in two clinical states of prostate cancer (PC), metastatic castration-resistant PC (mCRPC) and biochemical recurrence (BCR).Methods For dose escalation, patients with mCRPC received intramuscular PrCa VBIR (adenovirus vector and plasmid DNA expressing prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), prostate-specific antigen (PSA), and prostate stem cell antigen (PSCA)) with or without immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs, tremelimumab 40 or 80 mg with or without sasanlimab 130 or 300 mg, both subcutaneous). For dose expansion, patients with mCRPC received recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D) of PrCa VBIR plus tremelimumab 80 mg and sasanlimab 300 mg; patients with BCR received PrCa VBIR plus tremelimumab 80 mg (Cohort 1B-BCR) or tremelimumab 80 mg plus sasanlimab 130 mg (Cohort 5B-BCR) without androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). The primary endpoint was safety.Results Ninety-one patients were treated in dose escalation (mCRPC=38) and expansion (BCR=35, mCRPC=18). Overall, treatment-related and immune-related adverse events occurred in 64 (70.3%) and 39 (42.9%) patients, with fatigue (40.7%), influenza-like illness (30.8%), diarrhea (23.1%), and immune-related thyroid dysfunction (19.8%) and rash (15.4%), as the most common. In patients with mCRPC, the objective response rate (ORR, 95% CI) was 5.6% (1.2% to 15.4%) and the median radiographic progression-free survival (rPFS) was 5.6 (3.5 to not estimable) months for all; the ORR was 16.7% (3.6% to 41.4%) and 6-month rPFS rate was 45.5% (24.9% to 64.1%) for those who received RP2D with measurable disease (n=18). 7.4% of patients with mCRPC achieved a ≥50% decline in baseline PSA (PSA-50), with a median duration of 4.6 (1.2–45.2) months. In patients with BCR, 9 (25.7%) achieved PSA-50; the median duration of PSA response was 3.9 (1.9–4.2) and 10.1 (6.9–28.8) months for Cohorts 5B-BCR and 1B-BCR. Overall, antigen specific T-cell response was 88.0% to PSMA, 84.0% to PSA, and 80.0% to PSCA.Conclusions PrCa VBIR overall demonstrated safety signals similar to other ICI combination trials; significant side effects were seen in some patients with BCR. It stimulated antigen-specific immunity across all cohorts and resulted in modest antitumor activity in patients with BCR without using ADT.Trial registration number NCT02616185.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20220057 and 20511426
Volume :
11
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4a8a3a078ab4567a1641ae4c2b5d1db
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2022-005702