A Phase II Trial of Tiragolumab in Combination With Atezolizumab and Bevacizumab in Patients With Previously Treated, Microsatellite Stable, Metastatic Colorectal Adenocarcinoma

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

Trial Details

Sponsor: University of Colorado, Denver (other)

Phase: 2

Start date: March 25, 2025

Planned enrollment: 54

chevron Show Summary from Sponsor

Investigational Drug AI Analysis

chevron Show for: Tiragolumab (MTIG7192A, RG6058, RO7092284)

More Resources

Trial ID: NCT06784947
Copy trial ID
More trial details at ClinicalTrials.gov More info

chevron Show News & AI Analysis

HealthScout AI Analysis

Goal: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of a combination of tiragolumab, atezolizumab, and bevacizumab in patients with previously treated, microsatellite stable (MSS), metastatic colorectal adenocarcinoma.

Patients: Adults with biopsy-confirmed, unresectable, metastatic colorectal adenocarcinoma that is microsatellite stable/proficient mismatch repair, refractory to prior standard therapies (fluoropyrimidine, oxaliplatin, irinotecan, and EGFR inhibitor in appropriate patients). Patients must have measurable disease and an ECOG performance status of 0-2. Key exclusions include active autoimmune disease, prior TIGIT/PD-(L)1 inhibitor exposure, significant cardiovascular history, and uncontrolled metastases in the CNS or liver.

Design: This is an open-label, single-arm, Simon two-stage, phase II trial with two cohorts based on whether study biopsies are performed, but otherwise identical treatment regimens. All patients are non-randomized and receive combination therapy until progression, toxicity, or withdrawal.

Treatments: All patients receive atezolizumab, bevacizumab, and tiragolumab administered intravenously on a 21-day cycle. Tiragolumab is a monoclonal antibody targeting TIGIT, an immune inhibitory receptor, with the aim of augmenting anti-tumor immune activity. Previous trials in lung cancer showed encouraging phase II results but failed to demonstrate benefit in phase III NSCLC and small cell lung cancer trials. Atezolizumab is a PD-L1 inhibitor, and bevacizumab is an anti-VEGF antibody, both established agents in oncology.

Outcomes: The primary endpoint is objective response rate (ORR) by RECIST v1.1. Key secondary endpoints include progression-free survival, overall survival, safety/adverse events, and exploratory analyses on response and survival stratified by the presence of liver metastases. Other outcomes include disease control rate, duration of response, and immune correlates assessed via blood and tissue samples.

Burden on patient: The trial places a moderate burden on participants. All patients require regular clinic visits for infusions and imaging every 9 weeks. Participants in Cohort A have additional invasive procedures with pre- and on-treatment tumor biopsies, and all patients will undergo routine blood tests. No intensive PK blood sampling is specified. Therefore, the main additional burden compared to standard care is the potential for biopsy-related discomfort and risks, and more frequent monitoring.

Eligibility More information

chevron Show Criteria

Sites (1)

Sort by distance to:
Clear

Universtiy of Colorado Hospital

Aurora, Colorado, 80045, United States

[email protected] / 720-278-0236

Status: Recruiting

Please help us improve by giving us feedback or feature requests. Email [email protected]
Copy email address
Email copied to clipboard