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Trial Title:
Efficacy of Interleukin-2 in Triple Negative Breast Cancer
NCT ID:
NCT05821686
Condition:
Triple Negative Breast Cancer
Conditions: Official terms:
Breast Neoplasms
Triple Negative Breast Neoplasms
Aldesleukin
Interleukin-2
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
Phase 1/Phase 2
Overall status:
Not yet recruiting
Study design:
Allocation:
N/A
Intervention model:
Single Group Assignment
Primary purpose:
Treatment
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Drug
Intervention name:
Human Interleukin-2 (IL-2) (Proleukin)
Description:
All the recruited participants will receive 4 intralesional injections of Interleukin-2
with a dose of 500,000 international units (IU) per mm width of tumor to max dose of 10
million IU.
Arm group label:
Intervention Arm
Summary:
This study is a single arm, phase II pilot design. The study will evaluate the safety and
efficacy of intralesional immunotherapy (e.g. IL-2) in early stage TNBC. The overall
objective of the research study is to advance our knowledge of novel immunotherapies and
routes of administration for the treatment of TNBC
HYPOTHESES: Neoadjuvant treatment of TNBC with intralesional IL-2 is safe and well
tolerated and can produce a pathological response.
Aim 1: Examine the safety and possible efficacy of a novel neoadjuvant intralesional
intervention (IL-2) for patients with early-stage TNBC.
Detailed description:
Breast cancer is a leading cause of cancer related death in women. Triple negative breast
cancer (TNBC) is a subtype of breast cancer based on an immunohistochemistry that lacks
estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR) and human epidermal growth factor-2
(HER2) expression. It is known to disproportionately affects younger women and women of
African ancestry. TNBCs account for approximately 15-20% of all newly diagnosed breast
cancer. Compared to other subtypes of breast cancer, including hormone sensitive disease,
TNBC is associated with a high risk of distant metastases and is associated with a lower
disease-free and overall survival. As TNBCs lack expression for ER, PR and HER-2,
targeted therapies are ineffective. Immunotherapy has emerged as an important treatment
strategy in TNBC. Traditionally, breast cancer has been considered a 'cold' cancer but
the disease is highly heterogenous and TNBC appears to be more immunogenic (i.e. 'hot').
Compared to other forms of the disease, TNBC is associated with a higher mutational
burden, tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) and PD-L1 expression. The later is
associated with response to immunotherapy. Indeed, systemic immunotherapy is now approved
as first line therapy for metastatic and unresectable PD-L1 positive TNBC. Systemic
immunotherapy may also increase the incidence of pathologic complete response after
neoadjuvant therapy in early stage TNBC. Improvement in pathologic complete response is
weighed against rare but life-threatening immune related side-effects of immunotherapy,
including adrenal insufficiency, pneumonitis causing respiratory arrest and multi-organ
dysfunction syndrome.
Interleukin-2 is one of the first immunomodulating agents to be approved for cancer
treatment, including renal cell carcinoma and melanoma. The cytokine plays an important
role in the maintenance CD4+ regulatory T-cells and the differentiation of CD4+ T-cells
into a variety of subsets. It also promotes CD8+ T-cell and NK cell cytotoxicity activity
and modulates T-cell differentiation in response to antigen presentation. Systemically,
IL-2 is limited by a short half-life and significant toxicities. The intralesional
injection of IL-2 eliminates the undesirable grade II/III toxicities and often severe
side effects of the therapy, while achieving high doses of IL-2 at the tumor site. The
most common side effect of intralesional IL-2 is inflammation at the site of injection
and mild flu like symptoms, including fatigue and nausea. Rarely patients may experience
low-grade fever or headache, which are easily controlled by over-the-counter medications.
A number of studies have reported on the use of intralesional IL-2 in management of
in-transit melanoma. In this patient population, intralesional IL-2 produces a durable
complete response. Much less has been published on its use in other cancers, such as
breast cancer. However, there is case report level evidence to suggest that intralesional
IL-2 can produce a pathologic complete response in metastatic / unresectable TNBC.
The present study considers the significant scope that remains to improve the outcomes
for women with TNBC. This study seeks to build upon the growing body of evidence in
support of immunomodulation in the treatment of TNBC, while also exploring a different
and less toxic route of administration (i.e. intralesional as opposed to systemic). In
the window of opportunity between the time of initial surgical consultation and planned
OR for patients proceeding with upfront surgery, this study proposes to provide
intralesional IL-2 with immediate pathologic assessment.
This 'window of opportunity' design will provide us opportunity to conduct a pilot study
to evaluate the efficacy of an intralesional immunotherapy (e.g. IL-2) in early stage
TNBC as a well-tolerated, low-risk intervention with the potential to improve outcomes
without the toxicity of systemic treatment. As systemic immunotherapy moves from the
metastatic setting to the adjuvant setting and is increasingly being used in earlier and
earlier stage disease, the rationale for systemic therapy with systemic side effects to
treat a local disease becomes harder to justify. This study seeks to challenge the notion
that the only effective immunotherapy in the treatment of TNBC is systemic and perhaps a
local administration can produce the immune response needed to affect significant
pathologic response.
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
1. Women with biopsy proven TNBC who are not scheduled to receive neoadjuvant
chemotherapy.
2. Tumors ≤ 2 cm (clinical T1N0)
3. Planned upfront surgery (patient preference)
4. Medically unable to receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy
5. 18 - 80 years of age.
6. Able to provide consent for the study.
7. Able to come to the hospital for the intralesional injections.
Exclusion Criteria:
1. No diagnosis of TNBC.
2. Not able to provide consent for the study.
3. Not able to come to the hospital for study visits.
4. Presence of any contraindication for IL-2 therapy (abnormal thallium stress test,
abnormal pulmonary function test, organ allograft and toxicities with a previous
dosage).
5. Participant has experienced IL-2 related toxicities during an earlier course of
therapy (sustained ventricular tachycardia; cardiac arrythmias unresponsive to
management; chest pain with ECG changes consistent with angina or myocardial
infarction; cardiac tamponade; intubation required > 72 hours; renal failure
requiring dialysis > 72 hours; coma, or toxic psychosis > 48 hours; repetitive or
difficult to control seizures; bowel ischemia; gastrointestinal bleeding requiring
surgery)
6. If participant is on cancer treatment drugs and steroids to avoid drug interactions.
7. Known pregnancy and breast feeding. There are no known studies to support the use of
interleukin in pregnancy and breast-feeding mothers.
Gender:
Female
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
80 Years
Healthy volunteers:
No
Start date:
January 2, 2024
Completion date:
April 2025
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
Gregory Knapp
Agency class:
Other
Source:
Nova Scotia Health Authority
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05821686