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Pilot Study of GVAX in Colorectal Cancer Cells

A Pilot Safety Study of Vaccination With Autologous, Lethally Irradiated Colorectal Cancer Cells Engineered by Adenoviral Mediated Gene Transfer to Secrete Human Granulocyte-Macrophage Stimulating Factor

Status
Terminated
Phases
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01952730
Enrollment
1
Registered
2013-09-30
Start date
2013-11-08
Completion date
2020-02-29
Last updated
2023-01-12

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Colorectal Cancer

Keywords

Stage IV, Hepatic Lesions

Brief summary

This study is a Pilot clinical trial. Pilot clinical trials test the safety of an investigational combination of drugs. Pilot studies provide information on what effects, both good and bad, the Investigational agent might have on your disease. Investigational means that the intervention is still being studied and that research doctors are trying to find out more about it. It also means that the FDA has not approved the treatment for your type of cancer. The main purposes of this study are to determine: * The amount of vaccine that can be made for your colorectal tumor cells * If the vaccine can be given safely * What the effects of the vaccine are, both good and bad * How the vaccine affects your immune system * Whether this vaccine might have any effect on the return of your cancer in the liver after surgical removal This study is being done because there are currently no treatments which have demonstrated to cure diseae which has progressed, or moved beyond the site of the primary site of disease (colon or rectum). These vaccinations will be given after you have completed the standard of care treatment as determined by your doctor. Laboratory research has made vaccines from cancer cells by inserting genetic material from a protein called granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) into the cancer cell. Once complete, the cancer cells are able to produce large amounts of GM-CSF. The vaccine made form these cells has a greater anti-tumor effect than cancer cells without GM-CSF. The purpose of this research study is to determine the safety of an investigational vaccine that will be made using your own colorectal cancer cells in the manner described above. This vaccine has been used in several other research studies for treatment for other cancers (skin, lung, ovarian, sarcoma and leukemia.) Information from these other research studies suggests that this vaccine may help to reduce the risk of your colorectal cancer returning after you have your colorectal cancer surgery. Due to these results in melanoma and several other tumors we are encouraged to use this vaccine approach in patients with liver metastases from colorectal cancer, after the cancer in the liver has been removed by surgery.

Detailed description

After you have given your consent to participate in this study, your study doctor will perform some tests to confirm that you are eligible to participate. These tests may take place up to 21 days before the surgery to remove a liver tumor, which will be used to create the vaccines. Many of the following examinations are commonly done to determine diagnosis and/or stage of disease and you may have already had some or all of these evaluations. They may or may not have to be repeated. These tests include a medical history, performance status, blod samples, routine blood tests, tumor assessment and blood pregnancy test (if applicable). If these tests indicate you are eligible for this study and you agree to participate, you will be referred to a surgeon for the surgical removal of tumor tissue from which the vaccine will be made. The surgery will be performed at Massachusetts General Hospital. You will be asked to sign a separate consent form to give permission to the surgeon to perform this operation. That consent will describe the risks of the operation which involves removing the tumor cells from your liver. After your surgery, there is a possibility that your physician will recommend other treatment before starting the vaccines if he or she feels it would be beneficial to your care and medically appropriate. This part of the treatment would not be experimental (for example, chemotherapy or radiation therapy). Then, in this case, the vaccines made from your cancer will not be administered to you until at least 4 weeks after your last chemotherapy or radiation treatment. If the time between your operation and the first scheduled vaccine injection is 8 weeks or longer, we will ask you to undergo another chest, abdomen and pelvic CT scan and clinical blood work to confirm that it is still safe for you to proceed with the vaccines. After this 4 week rest period, vaccine administration will occur as previously outlined. If these tests indicate you are eligible for this study and you agree to participate, you will be referred to a surgeon for the surgical removal of tumor tissue from which the vaccine will be made. It is important to know that sometimes we are unable to collect enough cells from the tumor collection. In those cases we can try to grow the tumor cells for a short period of time to get enough cells to make a vaccine, but we can not guarantee that we will always be able to produce vaccine for every participant who undergoes tumor cell collection. The vaccines created from your colorectal cancer cells are scheduled to be given to you on days 1, 8, 15 and then every two weeks after that until 6 total vaccines have been administered. The amount of vaccines is dependent on the total amount of cells collected when your colorectal cancer liver metastasis is processed and prepared into vaccine in our lab. It is hoped that you will receive at least six vaccines. All scheduled treatment will occur in the outpatient clinic. The vaccines will be administered in two injections that will be placed underneath your skin. The two injections will be given at the same place on your body. The recommended sites are your arms, thighs or trunk area and the sites will rotate per vaccine. Day 1 is the first day of treatment on study. The following procedures are planned on this day: update of medical history, physical exam, blood samples for routine labs, required blood sample for immune studies, vaccine administration, and, if enough cells can be grown, you will receive an injection of cancer cells that have been killed but not able to secrete GM-CSF. This is done to measure the amount of reaction of your immune system caused by the vaccine alone. Punch biopsies will be obtained 2 days after the first and fifth vaccinations. A DTH injection will also be administered at the first and fifth vaccine. Two days after the vaccine and DTH administration punch biopsy will be taken. DTH injections are Delayed-type Hyper-sensitivity Tests. This injection inserts a small amount of the vaccine under your skin to determine if you have any allergic reactions to the vaccine. This will consist of a small piece of skin tissue removed under local anesthesia. A small stitch will be placed after the biopsy. You will sign a separate consent form for this procedure. The following procedures are planned for Days 8 and 15: update of medical history, weight and vital signs, blood samples for routine labs and immune studies, and vaccine administration. On day 29 and every two weeks (until no more vaccines are available) you wil undergo an update of medical history, physical exam, weight and vital signs, blood samples for routine labs and immune studies, punch biopsy and vaccine administration. With vaccine #5, you may receive a second DTH injection. Two days after the vaccine and DTH injection, punch biopsies will be taken off both sites to further evaluate your body's response to the treatment. After the final dose of study drug, your treating physician will determine if you are eligible to receive a second series of vaccinations. In addition, there must be sufficient numbers of cells for vaccine remaining from the original harvest or a new liver metastasis has occurred and been removed to make more vaccine. If you give consent to participate in the repeat dose phase, you will be required to repeat the screening tests to see if you are still eligible to participate in the study. It is possible that additional rounds of vaccine therapy may be offered after the second round, as long as it is appropriate in the opinion of your treating physician and additional tumor is available to make vaccine and you continue to meet the eligibility criteria. Participants will be monitored every 3 months with a blood test for the first 3 years and then every 6-12 months for a total of 5 years. Staging CT scans will be performed 3 months after the last vaccination, then every 6 months for the first three years and then yearly to year 5. After 5 years imaging will be at the discretion of the treating physician. Blood draws for immune research studies will occur every 3 months for 2 years after completing all vaccinations.

Interventions

BIOLOGICALGVAX

Sponsors

Massachusetts General Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Histologically documented hepatic colorectal cancer metastasis with resectable hepatic lesions * At least 4 weeks since last dose of chemotherapy, radiotherapy, immunotherapy, systemic glucocorticoid therapy or operation in order to receive vaccine * Fully recovered from hepatic resection

Exclusion criteria

* Pregnant or breastfeeding * Uncontrolled active infection * Infection with HIV, Hepatitis B or C * Other current malignancies except in situ cancer or basal/squamous cell carcinoma * Active autoimmune disease * Hepatic metastases involving both branches of the portal vein or all three hepatic veins * Peritoneal metastases identified at the time of attempted resection * Greater than 1 month since resection of liver metastasis for vaccine production

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Number of Patients Who Fail to Receive the First Six Scheduled Vaccinations Because of Toxicity2 yearsTo determine the safety of 6 vaccinations with lethally irradiated, autologous colorectal cancer cells engineered by adenoviral mediated gene transfer to secrete GM-CSF in stage IV colorectal cancer patients who are completely resected. Patient safety will be assured by monitoring the number of patients who fail to receive the first six scheduled vaccinations because of toxicity. If three or more patients experience grade 4 or worse toxicity due to the vaccine before completing six immunizations, the study will be terminated.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Progression Free Survival75 monthsTo determine the progression free survival of stage IV colorectal cancer patients vaccinated with lethally irradiated, autologous colorectal cancer cells engineered by adenoviral mediated gene transfer to secrete GM-CSF. Progression-Free Survival (PFS) is defined as the length of time during and after the treatment of a cancer, that a patient lives with the disease but it does not get worse, as per the National Cancer Institute. Progression is defined using Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors Criteria (RECIST v1.0), as a 20% increase in the sum of the longest diameter of target lesions, or a measurable increase in a non-target lesion, or the appearance of new lesions.
Immune Response2 yearsTo evaluate the immune response elicited by the vaccine. We will evaluate the immune cell composition(CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, T regulatory cells, macrophage, etc) in the resected specimens and in the circulating blood.
Two Year Survival2 yearsTo assess overall survival at 2 years

Countries

United States

Participant flow

Participants by arm

ArmCount
Experimental Treatment Arm
GVAX, up to 6 vaccinations, administered via injection GVAX
1
Total1

Withdrawals & dropouts

PeriodReasonFG000
Overall StudyFDA shut down core lab used by study1

Baseline characteristics

CharacteristicExperimental Treatment Arm
Age, Categorical
<=18 years
0 Participants
Age, Categorical
>=65 years
0 Participants
Age, Categorical
Between 18 and 65 years
1 Participants
Ethnicity (NIH/OMB)
Hispanic or Latino
0 Participants
Ethnicity (NIH/OMB)
Not Hispanic or Latino
1 Participants
Ethnicity (NIH/OMB)
Unknown or Not Reported
0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
American Indian or Alaska Native
0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Asian
0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Black or African American
0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
More than one race
0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Unknown or Not Reported
0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
White
1 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Female
1 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Male
0 Participants

Adverse events

Event typeEG000
affected / at risk
deaths
Total, all-cause mortality
0 / 1
other
Total, other adverse events
1 / 1
serious
Total, serious adverse events
0 / 1

Outcome results

Primary

Number of Patients Who Fail to Receive the First Six Scheduled Vaccinations Because of Toxicity

To determine the safety of 6 vaccinations with lethally irradiated, autologous colorectal cancer cells engineered by adenoviral mediated gene transfer to secrete GM-CSF in stage IV colorectal cancer patients who are completely resected. Patient safety will be assured by monitoring the number of patients who fail to receive the first six scheduled vaccinations because of toxicity. If three or more patients experience grade 4 or worse toxicity due to the vaccine before completing six immunizations, the study will be terminated.

Time frame: 2 years

ArmMeasureValue (NUMBER)
Experimental Treatment ArmNumber of Patients Who Fail to Receive the First Six Scheduled Vaccinations Because of Toxicity0 participants
Secondary

Immune Response

To evaluate the immune response elicited by the vaccine. We will evaluate the immune cell composition(CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, T regulatory cells, macrophage, etc) in the resected specimens and in the circulating blood.

Time frame: 2 years

Population: Only one patient was registered to this study who failed to receive all 6 vaccinations cause FDA put a few studies on hold since the core lab used by the studies was shut down by FDA. This study did not continue to draw blood so not enough data was collected to perform analysis.

Secondary

Progression Free Survival

To determine the progression free survival of stage IV colorectal cancer patients vaccinated with lethally irradiated, autologous colorectal cancer cells engineered by adenoviral mediated gene transfer to secrete GM-CSF. Progression-Free Survival (PFS) is defined as the length of time during and after the treatment of a cancer, that a patient lives with the disease but it does not get worse, as per the National Cancer Institute. Progression is defined using Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors Criteria (RECIST v1.0), as a 20% increase in the sum of the longest diameter of target lesions, or a measurable increase in a non-target lesion, or the appearance of new lesions.

Time frame: 75 months

ArmMeasureValue (NUMBER)
Experimental Treatment ArmProgression Free Survival75 months
Secondary

Two Year Survival

To assess overall survival at 2 years

Time frame: 2 years

ArmMeasureValue (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS)
Experimental Treatment ArmTwo Year Survival1 Participants

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026