학술논문

Intratumoral delivery of tavokinogene telseplasmid yields systemic immune responses in metastatic melanoma patients
Document Type
article
Source
Annals of Oncology. 31(4)
Subject
Vaccine Related
Immunization
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Clinical Research
Genetics
Cancer
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
6.1 Pharmaceuticals
Detection
screening and diagnosis
4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies
Electroporation
Humans
Immunity
Interleukin-12
Melanoma
Plasmids
Prospective Studies
Skin Neoplasms
Immunotherapy
IL-12
Tavokinogene telseplasmid
intratumoral
melanoma
electroporation
cytokine
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Oncology & Carcinogenesis
Language
Abstract
BackgroundInterleukin 12 (IL-12) is a pivotal regulator of innate and adaptive immunity. We conducted a prospective open-label, phase II clinical trial of electroporated plasmid IL-12 in advanced melanoma patients (NCT01502293).Patients and methodsPatients with stage III/IV melanoma were treated intratumorally with plasmid encoding IL-12 (tavokinogene telseplasmid; tavo), 0.5 mg/ml followed by electroporation (six pulses, 1500 V/cm) on days 1, 5, and 8 every 90 days in the main study and additional patients were treated in two alternative schedule exploration cohorts. Correlative analyses for programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1), flow cytometry to assess changes in immune cell subsets, and analysis of immune-related gene expression were carried out on pre- and post-treatment samples from study patients, as well as from additional patients treated during exploration of additional dosing schedules beyond the pre-specified protocol dosing schedule. Response was measured by study-specific criteria to maximize detection of latent and potentially transient immune responses in patients with multiple skin lesions and toxicities were graded by the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 4.0 (CTCAE v4.0).ResultsThe objective overall response rate was 35.7% in the main study (29.8% in all cohorts), with a complete response rate of 17.9% (10.6% in all cohorts). The median progression-free survival in the main study was 3.7 months while the median overall survival was not reached at a median follow up of 29.7 months. A total of 46% of patients in all cohorts with uninjected lesions experienced regression of at least one of these lesions and 25% had a net regression of all untreated lesions. Transcriptomic and immunohistochemistry analysis showed that immune activation and co-stimulatory transcripts were up-regulated but there was also increased adaptive immune resistance.ConclusionsIntratumoral Tavo was well tolerated and led to systemic immune responses in advanced melanoma patients. While tumor regression and increased immune infiltration were observed in treated as well as untreated/distal lesions, adaptive immune resistance limited the response.