Dissemin is shutting down on January 1st, 2025

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Oxford University Press, Neuro-Oncology, Supplement_2(24), p. ii6-ii6, 2022

DOI: 10.1093/neuonc/noac174.016

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KS05.6.A Oral DNA vaccination targeting VEGFR2 combined with the anti-PD-L1 antibody avelumab in patients with progressive glioblastoma - final results. NCT03750071

This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

Abstract Background Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR)2 overexpression on glioblastoma endothelia serves as a target for VEGFR2 primed T cells using VXM01 DNA vaccine encoding for VEGFR2. VXM01 is delivered in a bacterial Ty21a carrier suitable for oral administration. A previous phase I/II study in 14 patients with progressive glioblastoma showed a positive correlation of of VEGFR2 specific T cells as well as altered intra-tumoral immunity with prolonged overall survival. One partial response was reported with VXM01 alone. The current trial aimed at intensifying the efficacy signal and testing the co-administration of a checkpoint inhibitor. Material and Methods A multicentre, open-label phase I/II study (EudraCT 2017 003076 31) included 28 patients (25 non-resectable, 3 resectable) with progressive glioblastoma after standard chemoradiotherapy. VXM01 was administered on day 1, 3, 5, 7 followed by boostings q4w. Avelumab (800 mg) was given intravenously q2w. Treatment continued up to week 96 followed by a 2-year observation period. Endpoints included safety and tolerability, objective response rate (ORR), clinical response using immune-response assessment in Neurooncology criteria (iRANO), and immunological assays like ELISpot, FACS, and tumor immune biomarkers. Results Treatment with VXM01 106 or 107 CFU plus avelumab was completed in all patients. No treatment-related toxicities were observed. Three partial responses (according to iRANO) with tumor reductions of 58, 81 and 95% to baseline, respectively, were reported in the non-resectable patients (Objective response rate (ORR) was 12% (3/25)). Two of these patients were progression-free > 12 months. Best response in 3 additional non-resectable patients was SD including one patient progression-free > 6 months. In one resected patient, tumor shrinkage of 30% each was observed after initial treatment before resection as well as subsequent to incomplete resection, associated with survival > 18 months, and accompanied by an increase of intratumoral CD8+ T-cells. Conclusion VXM01 in combination with avelumab was safe and produced detectable peripheral VEGFR-2-specific immune responses. Three non-resected patients had an objective response, three more patients experienced best response stable disease. For future studies a patient enrichment strategy based on immune biomarkers might be envisaged.