Sponsor: Philogen S.p.A. (industry)
Phase: 2
Start date: July 12, 2024
Planned enrollment: 162
L19IL2 (other names: Darleukin; INN: bifikafusp alfa) is an investigational immunocytokine that fuses human interleukin‑2 (IL‑2) to L19, a human antibody specific for the extra‑domain B (ED‑B) of fibronectin, an oncofetal splice variant abundantly expressed in tumor neovasculature and stroma but largely absent from most normal adult tissues. The construct is intended to concentrate IL‑2 activity in the tumor microenvironment to activate antitumor T and NK cells while limiting systemic exposure. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Clinical development has included intravenous and intralesional administration across solid tumors, with the most mature data in melanoma as monotherapy (intralesional) and in combinations (e.g., with dacarbazine; or with L19TNF as the fixed‑dose intralesional combination “daromun”). (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Melanoma (intralesional monotherapy) - Phase II, stage IIIB/IIIC melanoma with injectable lesions (weekly x4): 24 evaluable patients; complete response (CR) of all treated metastases in 6/24 (25%); at the lesion level, 53.9% of index lesions responded (44.4% CR, 9.5% PR). Most CRs were durable (≥24 months in 5 patients). (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Melanoma (systemic combination with chemotherapy) - Randomized phase II in stage IV melanoma (L19IL2 + dacarbazine vs dacarbazine): ORR 18.4% (7/38) with L19IL2+DTIC vs 4.5% (1/22) with DTIC; progression‑free survival showed only a small, not statistically significant difference (median 41 vs 39 days). Some responses were durable (>1 year). (pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Melanoma (intralesional combination with L19TNF; “daromun”)
- Phase II (unresectable stage IIIC/IVM1a): among 20 evaluable patients treated with intralesional L19IL2+L19TNF, numerous injected lesions achieved CR, and notable regression occurred in non‑injected lesions (CR in 7/13; 53.8%), consistent with systemic immune effects. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
- Phase III neoadjuvant (stage IIIB/C; PIVOTAL, NCT02938299): intralesional daromun weekly x4 before surgery improved recurrence‑free survival versus upfront surgery (median 16.7 vs 6.8 months; HR 0.59, 95% CI 0.41–0.86; P=0.005); distant metastasis–free survival also improved. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Note: daromun combines bifikafusp alfa (L19IL2) with onfekafusp alfa (L19TNF); results reflect the combination, not L19IL2 alone.
Renal cell carcinoma (systemic monotherapy) - Phase I/II dose‑finding/expansion (IV L19IL2): recommended dose 22.5 million IU (IL‑2 equivalents); in the RCC expansion cohort, stable disease in 15/18 (83%) after two cycles; median PFS 8 months (range 1.5–30.5 months). (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Other ongoing development
- NSCLC: a multinational phase II “ImmunoSABR” trial is evaluating SABR followed by L19IL2 (± checkpoint inhibitor per SOC); protocol published, results pending. (bmccancer.biomedcentral.com)
- Melanoma: a randomized phase II trial (INTACT/MeRCI; NCT06284590) is testing intralesional L19IL2, L19TNF, or the combination with pembrolizumab in anti‑PD‑1–resistant settings (enrolling). (mskcc.org)
Intralesional monotherapy (melanoma) - Predominantly low‑grade, localized toxicities; injection‑site reactions were common. No treatment‑related serious adverse events were reported in the phase II intralesional study. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Systemic administration and combinations - IV monotherapy (phase I/II): toxicities were manageable/reversible; recommended dose 22.5 million IU; no treatment‑related deaths reported. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) - With dacarbazine (phase II): mostly grade 1–2 events (pyrexia, nausea, arthralgia, liver enzyme elevations); infrequent grade 3 events (e.g., hypotension, arthralgia, lab abnormalities). (pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) - With L19TNF as daromun (neoadjuvant phase III): grade ≥3 treatment‑related AEs occurred in 27.1% with daromun vs 6.7% with surgery alone; events were largely transient and manageable; most were injection‑site reactions. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Nidlegy (fixed‑dose intralesional combination of bifikafusp alfa [L19IL2] + onfekafusp alfa [L19TNF]) underwent EMA review for melanoma but the marketing authorization application was withdrawn on June 24, 2025; the CHMP published a withdrawal assessment report on October 1, 2025. This pertains to the combination and not to L19IL2 as a standalone product. (ema.europa.eu)
Last updated: Oct 2025
L19TNF (onfekafusp alfa; Fibromun) is an investigational immunocytokine composed of human TNF-α fused to the L19 antibody fragment, which targets the extra domain B (ED‑B) of fibronectin, an oncofetal isoform abundantly expressed in tumor neovasculature and stroma but largely absent from normal adult tissues. It is given intravenously, typically on days 1, 3, and 5 of 21‑day cycles, and is being evaluated across solid tumors, with the most advanced programs in soft tissue sarcoma (STS) and glioblastoma (GBM). (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Soft tissue sarcoma
- Monotherapy (first-in-human, phase I/II): No objective responses; stable disease in 19/31 evaluable patients. This study established feasibility and informed dosing/schedule. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
- Combination with doxorubicin (phase I, advanced tumors including STS): Recommended dose (RD) was 13 μg/kg L19TNF (days 1,3,5) + 60 mg/m² doxorubicin (day 1) q3w. Among 15 evaluable STS patients in the expansion cohort: CR 1/15, PR 1/15, minor shrinkage in 7/15; median OS 14.9 months in a heavily pretreated population. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
- Ongoing randomized phase III (FIBROSARC; first‑line advanced/metastatic STS): L19TNF + doxorubicin vs doxorubicin alone; primary endpoint PFS. Trial is ongoing; an independent DSMB recommended continuation at preplanned interim analysis (Nov 9, 2023). No efficacy results have been reported yet. (ichgcp.net)
Glioblastoma
- Combination with lomustine (phase I/II program in recurrent GBM): Phase I part (15 patients, 2021–2023) reported the regimen was well tolerated; MRI showed near‑complete responses in 3/15 (20%) and stable disease in 8/15 (53%); median PFS 4.2 months; PFS‑6 of 46%. Phase II is ongoing/recruiting, including U.S. sites. (academic.oup.com)
- Additional translational/ESMO reports support synergy of L19TNF + lomustine and immunomodulatory effects in preclinical GBM models, with early clinical activity signals. (oncologypro.esmo.org)
Newly diagnosed GBM
- A separate open‑label phase I/II/IIb study is evaluating L19TNF added to standard temozolomide chemoradiotherapy; primary completion is estimated for 2026. No efficacy readout is available yet. (cdek.pharmacy.purdue.edu)
Notes: As of October 7, 2025, no phase III efficacy results for STS or randomized efficacy results for GBM have been published. Ongoing trials may update these data. (ichgcp.net)
Last updated: Oct 2025
Goal: Evaluate whether intratumoral L19IL2, L19TNF, or the combination L19IL2/L19TNF, each given with systemic pembrolizumab, can induce objective responses in anti–PD-1–refractory unresectable stage III–IV melanoma compared with historical outcomes of anti–PD-1 re‑challenge alone.
Patients: Adults ≥18 years with histologically/cytologically confirmed unresectable melanoma (AJCC 8th ed. stage IIIB–IIID or IVM1a; selected oligometastatic IVM1b/c/d allowed up to 10 total distant lesions) who have primary or acquired resistance to prior anti‑PD‑1/PD‑L1 therapy. Must have at least one injectable cutaneous, subcutaneous, or nodal lesion ≥5 mm, measurable disease by RECIST v1.1, ECOG 0–1, adequate organ function, negative for active HBV/HCV/HIV viremia, and availability of tumor tissue. Key exclusions include uveal or mucosal melanoma, symptomatic or rapidly enlarging/bleeding brain metastases, uncontrolled autoimmune disease, prior discontinuation of checkpoint therapy for ≥grade 3 irAEs, recent systemic therapy or radiotherapy without recovery, and significant immunosuppression.
Design: Randomized, open-label, three-arm, parallel group phase 2 using a Simon two-stage design with a safety run-in of the first 12 patients per arm. Total planned enrollment 162, randomized 1:1:1. No blinding. Pembrolizumab continues every 3 weeks up to ~2 years or until progression/toxicity. PFS follow-up to 2 years and OS follow-up to 3 years from first intralesional treatment. Safety overseen by an independent DSMB.
Treatments: All arms receive pembrolizumab IV every 3 weeks plus a 4-week course of intralesional immunocytokine(s): Arm 1 L19IL2; Arm 2 L19TNF; Arm 3 L19IL2/L19TNF combination. L19IL2 (bifikafusp alfa; Darleukin) is an antibody–cytokine fusion targeting the ED‑B domain of fibronectin to deliver IL‑2 to tumor vasculature/stroma, aiming to activate local CD8 T cells and NK cells with reduced systemic exposure. Prior data show intralesional activity in stage III melanoma with durable complete responses in a subset, and improved ORR when combined with dacarbazine versus dacarbazine alone in metastatic melanoma; safety is generally manageable with predominantly low‑grade IL‑2–type effects in intralesional use. L19TNF (onfekafusp alfa; Fibromun) is an ED‑B–targeted TNF‑α fusion designed to concentrate TNF within tumor vasculature to induce vascular damage and necrosis; early studies demonstrate local activity in regional therapies and manageable systemic safety profiles, while ongoing pivotal programs in STS and glioblastoma are evaluating efficacy. The L19IL2/L19TNF intralesional combination has shown local tumor necrosis and responses in stage III/IVM1a melanoma with mainly grade 1–2 local reactions in early phase studies. Pembrolizumab is a standard anti–PD‑1 therapy administered IV every 3 weeks.
Outcomes: Primary endpoint is confirmed objective response rate (CR+PR) by RECIST v1.1 in each arm up to 2 years from first intralesional treatment in the ITT population. Secondary endpoints include best overall response, duration of response, pathological response at week 18 in an injected lesion, confirmed ORR by iRECIST and itRECIST, PFS from randomization, OS from randomization, and safety/tolerability (AEs, SAEs, immune-related AEs, AESIs, DILI). Extensive safety monitoring includes serial labs (hematology, chemistries, coagulation, endocrine markers), vitals, ECGs, echocardiography, and assessment of anti-drug antibodies. Imaging for tumor assessments is scheduled at weeks 12, 18, 24, 36, 48, 64, 80, and 96 or until progression.
Burden on patient: Moderate to high. Patients undergo a screening period, frequent visits during the 4-week intralesional treatment phase, regular pembrolizumab infusions every 3 weeks for up to 2 years, and serial imaging approximately every 12–16 weeks through 2 years. Protocol-mandated biopsies include baseline tissue and a week 18 biopsy of an injected target lesion, with optional biopsies at progression, adding procedural burden. Safety evaluations include repeated blood tests (hematology, chemistry, endocrine), vitals, ECGs, and echocardiograms at specified time points, as well as monitoring for anti-fusion protein antibodies. Intratumoral injections require availability of injectable lesions and may necessitate multiple treatment-site visits. Travel and time commitments are greater than standard pembrolizumab re‑challenge alone due to intralesional procedures and added assessments.
Last updated: Oct 2025
Inclusion Criteria:
1. The participant (or legally acceptable representative if applicable) provides written informed consent for the trial.
2. Be \> or equal to 18 years of age on day of signing informed consent.
3. Participant with histologically or cytologically confirmed diagnosis of unresectable metastatic melanoma at stage III B, C, D or IV M1a (AJCC 8th ed.). Patients with Stage IVM1b, M1c and M1d oligometastatic disease \[up to 10 lesions in aggregate including lung, liver, bone or brain, with or without lymph node involvement\], are eligible. However, patients with symptomatic or rapidly enlarging/bleeding brain lesions are excluded. Patients with acral lentiginous melanoma are eligible as well. Detailed information about prior therapies and burden of disease at study entry must be available.
4. Patients must have confirmed primary resistance to or acquired resistance on treatment with an anti-PD1/L1 monoclonal antibody (mAb) administered either as monotherapy, or in combination with other checkpoint inhibitors or other therapies. PD-1 treatment progression is defined by meeting all of the following criteria: a.) Has received at least 2 doses of an approved anti-PD-1/L1 mAb.
b.) Has demonstrated disease progression (PD) after PD-1/L1 as defined by RECIST v1.1. The initial evidence of PD is to be confirmed by a second assessment no less than four weeks from the date of the first documented PD, in the absence of rapid clinical progression. c.) Progressive disease has been documented within 12 weeks from the last dose of anti- PD-1/L1 mAb.
i. Progressive disease is determined according to iRECIST. ii. This determination is made by the investigator. Once PD is confirmed, the initial date of PD documentation will be considered the date of disease progression.
5. Patients harboring the BRAF mutation who received BRAF/MEK inhibition (or declined BRAF/MEK inhibitors) and received thereafter anti-PD1 therapy showing resistance to such immunotherapy are eligible to the study. Anti-PD1 immunotherapy must be the last therapy received by the patient prior to randomization.
6. Eligible subjects must have measurable disease (according to RECIST v1.1) as assessed by the local site investigator/radiology. Lesions situated in a previously irradiated area are considered measurable if progression has been demonstrated in such lesions. Eligible subjects must be a candidate for intralesional therapy with at least one injectable cutaneous, subcutaneous, or nodal metastatic melanoma lesion (≥ 5 mm in longest diameter) or with multiple injectable lesions that in aggregate have a diameter of ≥ 5 mm.
7. A female participant is eligible to participate if she is not pregnant, not breastfeeding, and at least one of the following conditions applies: a.) Not a woman of childbearing potential (WOCBP) b.) A WOCBP who agrees to follow contraceptive guidance during the treatment period and for at least 120 days after the last dose of study treatment. WOCBP must be using for the time period indicated highly effective contraception methods. WOCBP and effective contraception methods are defined by the "Recommendations for contraception and pregnancy testing in clinical trials" issued by the Head of Medicine Agencies' Clinical Trial Facilitation Group and which include, for instance, progesterone-only or combined (estrogen- and progesterone-containing) hormonal contraception associated with inhibition of ovulation, intrauterine devices, intrauterine hormone-releasing systems, bilateral tubal occlusion, vasectomized partner or sexual abstinence. Pregnancy test will be repeated at the safety visit (only WOCBP).
8. Have provided archival tumor tissue sample or newly obtained core or excisional biopsy of a tumor lesion not previously irradiated. Formalin-fixed, paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissue blocks are preferred to slides. Newly obtained biopsies are preferred to archived tissue.
Note: If submitting unstained cut slides, newly cut slides should be submitted to the testing laboratory within 14 days from the date slides are cut (details pertaining to tumor tissue submission can be found in the Procedures Manual).
9. Have an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 0 to 1.
10. Have adequate organ function as defined in the following table. Specimens must be collected within 14 days prior to the start of study treatment.
11. Be able to provide a core or excisional lymph node biopsy for biomarker analysis from an archival or newly obtained biopsy at Screening. In addition, participants may provide additional biopsy at Week 18 and at the time of discontinuation due to progression
12. Documented negative test for HIV, HBV and HCV. For HBV serology, the determination of HBsAg and anti-HBcAg Ab is required. In patients with serology documenting previous exposure to HBV (e.g. anti-HBsAg and/or anti-HBc Ab) a negative serum HBV-DNA test is also required.
13. All acute toxic effects (excluding alopecia and vitiligo) of any prior therapy must have resolved to National Cancer Institute (NCI) Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) (v. 5.0) Grade ≤ 1 or baseline unless otherwise specified above. Note: Participants with ≤Grade β neuropathy may be eligible. Participants with endocrinerelated AEs Grade ≤β requiring treatment or hormone replacement may be eligible. Note: If the participant had major surgery, the participant must have recovered adequately from the procedure and/or any complications from the surgery prior to starting study intervention.
14. Full resolution of checkpoint blockade therapy-related adverse effects (including immunerelated adverse effects) and no treatment for these AEs for at least 4 weeks prior to the time of enrollment.
15. No history of severe immune related adverse effects from prior given immune checkpoint blockade therapy (CTCAE Grade 4; CTCAE Grade 3 requiring treatment \>4 weeks).
16. Male patients with WOCBP partners must agree to use simultaneously two acceptable methods of contraception (i.e. spermicidal gel plus condom) from the screening to three months following the last study drug administration. In addition, male participant must refrain from sperm donation during the treatment period.
17. Willingness and ability to comply with the scheduled visits, treatment plan, laboratory tests and other study procedures.
Exclusion Criteria:
Participants are excluded from the study if any of the following criteria apply:
Medical Conditions
1. Patients with more than 10 distant melanoma lesions in lung, liver, bone or brain combined. Patients with symptomatic or rapidly enlarging/bleeding brain lesions are excluded.
2. Uveal melanoma or mucosal melanoma or melanoma with unknown primary.
Pregnancy Exclusion
3. A WOCBP who has a positive urine pregnancy test (within 72 hours) prior to treatment. If the urine test is positive or cannot be confirmed as negative, a serum pregnancy test will be required.
Prior/Concomitant Therapy
4. Has received prior therapy with an anti-PD-1, anti-PD-L1, or anti PD L2 agent or with an agent directed to another stimulatory or co-inhibitory T-cell receptor (e.g., CTLA-4, OX 40, CD137), and was discontinued from that treatment due to a Grade 3 or higher irAE.
5. Has received prior systemic anti-cancer therapy including investigational agents or has used an investigational device within 4 weeks prior to the first dose of study treatment. Note: Participants who have entered the follow-up phase of an investigational study may participate as long as it has been 4 weeks after the last dose of the previous investigational agent.
6. Has received prior radiotherapy within 2 weeks of start of study treatment or have had a history of radiation pneumonitis. Note: Participants must have recovered from all radiation-related toxicities and not require corticosteroids. A 1-week washout is permitted for palliative radiation (≤β weeks of radiotherapy) to non-CNS disease.
7. Has undergone prior allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation within the last 5 years. (Participants who have had a transplant greater than 5 years ago are eligible as long as there are no symptoms of GVHD).
8. Has had an allogeneic tissue/solid organ transplant.
9. Has received live live or live attenuated vaccines within 30 days prior to the first dose of study treatment and while participating in the study. Note: Killed vaccines are allowed. Note: Any licensed COVID-19 vaccine (including for Emergency use) in a particular country is allowed in the study as long as they are mRNA vaccines, adenoviral vaccines, or inactivated vaccines. These vaccines will be treated just as any other concomitant therapy. Investigational vaccines (i.e., those not licensed or approved for Emergency Use) are not allowed.
Diagnostic assessments
10. Has a diagnosis of immunodeficiency or is receiving chronic systemic steroid therapy (in dosing exceeding 10 mg daily of prednisone equivalent) or any other form of immunosuppressive therapy within 7 days prior the first dose of study drug.
11. Has a known additional malignancy that is progressing or has required active treatment within the past two (2) years. Note: Participants with basal cell carcinoma of the skin, squamous cell carcinoma of the skin, superficial bladder tumors (Ta, Tis \& T1), second primary melanoma in situ, or carcinoma in situ, that have undergone potentially curative therapy are not excluded.
12. Has known active CNS metastases and/or carcinomatous meningitis. Participants with previously treated brain metastases may participate provided they are radiologically stable, i.e., without evidence of progression for at least 4 weeks by repeat imaging (note that the repeat imaging should be performed during study screening), clinically stable and without requirement of steroid treatment for at least 14 days prior to first dose of study treatment.
13. Has severe hypersensitivity (≥Grade γ) to pembrolizumab and/or any of its excipients, or to (immuno)cytokines IL2, TNF and/or any of its excipients
14. Has an active autoimmune disease that has required systemic treatment in past 2 years (i.e., with use of disease modifying agents, corticosteroids or immunosuppressive drugs).
Replacement therapy (e.g., thyroxine, insulin, or physiologic corticosteroid replacement therapy for adrenal or pituitary insufficiency) is not considered a form of systemic treatment and is allowed.
15. Has a history of (non-infectious) pneumonitis / interstitial lung disease that required steroids or has current pneumonitis / interstitial lung disease.
16. Has an active infection requiring systemic therapy.
17. Has a history or current evidence of any condition, therapy, or laboratory abnormality, or other circumstance that might confound the results of the study or interfere with the participant's participation for the full duration of the study, such that it is not in the best interest of the participant to participate, in the opinion of the treating investigator.
18. Has a known psychiatric or substance abuse disorder that would interfere with the participant's ability to cooperate with the requirements of the study.
19. Previous enrolment and randomization in this same study.
New York, New York, 10065, United States
[email protected] / No phone
Status: Recruiting