4.7 Article

Phase I trial of intratumoral PVSRIPO in patients with unresectable, treatment-refractory melanoma

Journal

JOURNAL FOR IMMUNOTHERAPY OF CANCER
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2020-002203

Keywords

melanoma; oncolytic virotherapy

Funding

  1. Istari Oncology
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [NIHK08 CA237726-01A1]
  3. Duke Cancer Institute's Pilot Grant (P30 Cancer Center Grant) [NIH CA014236]
  4. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program award [W81XWH-16-1-0354]
  5. NIH T-32 grant [T32-CA093245]
  6. Polka Dot Mama Melanoma Foundation

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In a phase I trial of intratumoral PVSRIPO in patients with unresectable melanoma, the treatment was well tolerated with promising antitumor activity, showing no serious adverse events reported and achieving an objective response rate of 33%, with some patients experiencing complete response in both injected and uninjected lesions.
Background While programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) and programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) antagonists have improved the prognosis for many patients with melanoma, around 60% fail therapy. PVSRIPO is a non-neurovirulent rhinovirus:poliovirus chimera that facilitates an antitumor immune response following cell entry via the poliovirus receptor CD155, which is expressed on tumor and antigen-presenting cells. Preclinical studies show that oncolytic virus plus anti-PD-1 therapy leads to a greater antitumor response than either agent alone, warranting clinical investigation. Methods An open-label phase I trial of intratumoral PVSRIPO in patients with unresectable melanoma (American Joint Committee on Cancer V.7 stage IIIB, IIIC, or IV) was performed. Eligible patients had disease progression on anti-PD-1 and V-raf murine sarcoma viral oncogene homolog B (BRAF)/mitogen activated protein kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitors (if BRAF mutant). The primary objective was to characterize the safety and tolerability of PVSRIPO. Twelve patients in four cohorts received a total of 1, 2 or 3 injections of PVSRIPO monotherapy, with 21 days between injections. Results PVSRIPO injections were well tolerated with no serious adverse events (SAEs) or dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) reported. All adverse events (AEs) were grade (G) 1 or G2 (G1 pruritus most common at 58%); all but two PVSRIPO-treatment related AEs were localized to the injected or adjacent lesions (n=1 G1 hot flash, n=1 G1 fatigue). Four out of 12 patients (33%) achieved an objective response per immune-related response criteria (two observations, 4 weeks apart), including 4/6 (67%) who received three injections. In the four patients with in-transit disease, a pathological complete response (pCR) was observed in two (50%) patients. Following study completion, 11/12 patients (92%) reinitiated immune checkpoint inhibitor-based therapy, and 6/12 patients (50%) remained without progression at a median follow-up time of 18 months. Conclusion Intratumoral PVSRIPO was well tolerated. Despite the limited number of PVSRIPO treatments relative to the overall lesion burden (67% patients>5 lesions), intratumoral PVSRIPO showed promising antitumor activity, with pCR in injected as well as non-injected lesions in select patients.

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