Atezolizumab Plus Tivozanib in Immunologically Cold Tumor Types

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Moderate burden on patient More information Started >3 years ago More information

Trial Details

Sponsor: University of Florida (other)

Phase: 1/2

Start date: Dec. 7, 2021

Planned enrollment: 29

Trial ID: NCT05000294
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More trial details at ClinicalTrials.gov More info

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Investigational Drug AI Analysis

No investigational drugs.

HealthScout AI Analysis

Goal: The goal of the trial is to evaluate the efficacy of combining atezolizumab and tivozanib in patients with immunologically cold solid tumors that are traditionally resistant to immune checkpoint blockade, with the aim of improving tumor response rates in this challenging population.

Patients: The trial studies adult patients (age ≥ 18) with advanced or metastatic, immunologically cold cancers including biliary tract cancers, HR-negative/HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer, well- or moderately-differentiated grade 2 or 3 neuroendocrine tumors, high grade serous or endometrioid ovarian/peritoneal/tubal cancer that is platinum resistant, pancreatic adenocarcinoma, soft tissue sarcoma, castrate-resistant prostate cancer (post-androgen inhibitor or cytotoxic chemotherapy), and vulvar cancer. Patients must have measurable disease, be ECOG 0-1 for phase 1B or 0-2 for phase 2, and have failed or be intolerant to previous standard therapies. Patients with MSI-H/dMMR tumors, prior VEGFR TKI exposure, or prior immune checkpoint inhibitors are excluded.

Design: This is a single-arm, phase 1/2 trial with no randomization or comparator arm. The study uses RECIST criteria for measurable disease and has comprehensive inclusion and exclusion criteria to optimize safety and homogeneity in this heavily pretreated population.

Treatments: The investigational combination being studied is atezolizumab, an anti-PD-L1 immune checkpoint inhibitor, and tivozanib, an oral VEGF tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Atezolizumab inhibits the PD-1/PD-L1 axis to enhance T-cell mediated antitumor immunity. Tivozanib selectively inhibits VEGFR, leading to antiangiogenic effects and potentially modifying the tumor microenvironment to be more responsive to immunotherapy. Preclinical and early clinical evidence suggest that VEGF blockade can improve immune response in tumors previously resistant to checkpoint inhibition, but robust clinical data for this combination in non-clear cell, immunologically cold cancers is limited.

Outcomes: The primary outcome is the objective response rate (ORR) per RECIST v1.1. Secondary outcomes include progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS), and disease control rate (DCR; defined as complete response, partial response, or stable disease). All outcomes are assessed over a 30-month time frame.

Burden on patient: Burden on patients is moderate. Enrollment requires recent tumor tissue (within 3 years) or ability to obtain a new biopsy, which may add procedural risk. Patients need to be able to swallow oral medications. The study involves regular imaging and clinical assessments as per RECIST and safety monitoring, though pharmacokinetic sampling is not highlighted. Frequent travel for visits and close clinical follow-up may be required, consistent with early phase oncology trials.

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University of Florida

Gainesville, Florida, 32608, United States

[email protected] / 352-265-5329

Status: Recruiting

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