A Phase 2, Three-arm, Randomized Study of the Efficacy of Intratumorally Administered L19IL2 or L19TNF or L19IL2/L19TNF, All in Combination with Systemic Anti-PD1 Pembrolizumab, in Stage III and IV Unresectable Melanoma Patients with Resistance to or Progressing Upon Anti-PD1 Checkpoint Inhibitors and with Presence of Injectable Metastases

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Investigational drug late phase More information Active drug More information Moderate burden on patient More information

Trial Details

Sponsor: Philogen S.p.A. (industry)

Phase: 2

Start date: July 12, 2024

Planned enrollment: 162

Trial ID: NCT06284590
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More trial details at ClinicalTrials.gov More info

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chevron Show for: L19IL2 (Darleukin, bifikafusp alfa)

chevron Show for: L19TNF (Fibromun, Onfekafusp alfa)

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Goal: Evaluate whether intratumoral L19IL2, L19TNF, or their combination (L19IL2/L19TNF), each given with systemic pembrolizumab, can induce objective responses in patients with unresectable stage III–IV melanoma that is refractory to prior anti–PD-1/L1 therapy, compared with historical expectations for anti–PD-1 re-challenge alone.

Patients: Adults ≥18 years with histologically/cytologically confirmed unresectable melanoma: stage IIIB–D or IV M1a; select oligometastatic M1b/c/d allowed (≤10 total distant lesions across lung, liver, bone, brain). Primary or acquired resistance to anti–PD-1/L1 is required, with progression per RECIST v1.1 confirmed and occurring within 12 weeks of last PD-1/L1 dose. Must have at least one injectable cutaneous, subcutaneous, or nodal lesion ≥5 mm (or multiple totaling ≥5 mm), measurable disease per RECIST v1.1, ECOG 0–1, adequate organ function, and available tumor tissue; treated, stable brain metastases off steroids ≥14 days are allowed. Key exclusions include >10 distant lesions, symptomatic/bleeding or rapidly enlarging brain lesions, uveal or mucosal melanoma, prior severe irAEs leading to discontinuation of checkpoint therapy, uncontrolled autoimmune disease or pneumonitis, active infection, significant immunosuppression, recent investigational therapy, and organ transplantation.

Design: Open-label, randomized, three-arm, parallel Phase 2 study using a Simon two-stage design with a safety run-in (first 12 patients per arm). Allocation 1:1:1 to pembrolizumab plus intralesional L19IL2, L19TNF, or L19IL2/L19TNF. Screening up to 2 weeks; 4-week intralesional treatment period with immunocytokines; pembrolizumab every 3 weeks for up to 35 cycles (~2 years) or until progression/unacceptable toxicity. PFS follow-up to 2 years; OS follow-up to 3 years. Safety oversight by DSMB; AEs graded per CTCAE v5.0.

Treatments: All arms receive pembrolizumab IV q3w for up to ~2 years. Arm 1: intralesional L19IL2; Arm 2: intralesional L19TNF; Arm 3: intralesional L19IL2/L19TNF. L19IL2 (bifikafusp alfa) is an antibody–cytokine fusion linking the L19 antibody to interleukin-2 to target the ED-B domain of fibronectin in tumor neovasculature/ECM, concentrating IL-2 within tumors to activate CD8 T and NK cells while limiting systemic exposure. Prior trials show activity as intralesional monotherapy in stage III melanoma with durable complete responses and improved outcomes when combined with dacarbazine systemically; safety has generally been manageable, with mostly low-grade IL-2–type reactions intralesionally. L19TNF (onfekafusp alfa) fuses TNF-α to L19 for ED-B–targeted vascular delivery, inducing local vascular damage/necrosis and potential immune priming; early systemic studies showed disease stabilization and acceptable safety, and regional therapy data (isolated limb perfusion) in melanoma demonstrated high local response rates. The intralesional combination L19IL2/L19TNF has demonstrated local tumor necrosis and responses with primarily grade 1–2 local reactions in phase 2 melanoma cohorts. The rationale for this trial is that targeted cytokine delivery may convert PD-1–refractory disease to PD-1–responsive by reshaping the tumor microenvironment.

Outcomes: Primary: Confirmed objective response rate (CR+PR) per RECIST v1.1 in each arm, assessed up to 2 years from first intralesional treatment in the ITT population. Secondary: Best overall response, duration of response, pathological response in one injected target lesion at week 18, confirmed ORR by iRECIST and itRECIST, PFS from randomization, OS from randomization, and safety (AEs, SAEs, immune-related AEs, AESIs, DILI). Extensive safety monitoring includes vitals, ECGs, echocardiography, hematology and chemistry panels, coagulation parameters, endocrine labs (e.g., ACTH), immunogenicity (anti-fusion protein antibodies), and LDH. Tumor assessments at weeks 12, 18, 24, 36, 48, 64, 80, and 96 or until progression/death.

Burden on patient: Moderate. Patients undergo frequent visits during the initial 4-week intralesional treatment period for injections plus pembrolizumab infusions every 3 weeks for up to two years, which requires regular travel to the clinic. Imaging is scheduled approximately every 12–16 weeks through week 96, comparable to standard-of-care in advanced melanoma. Additional burden arises from mandated biopsies (archival or new at screening; one injected target lesion re-biopsy at week 18; optional at progression), serial safety laboratories across hematology, chemistry, coagulation, endocrine tests, immunogenicity sampling at weeks 1, 2, and 12, and scheduled ECG/ECHO assessments at screening, week 5, and week 18. There are no intensive pharmacokinetic time-course draws, but intralesional procedures and repeat biopsies increase procedural visits and local-site discomfort relative to standard PD-1 therapy alone.

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Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

New York, New York, 10065, United States

[email protected] / No phone

Status: Recruiting

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