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Durvalumab With or Without Tremelimumab in Resectable Locally Advanced Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Oral Cavity

Durvalumab (MEDI4736) Plus Tremelimumab in Resectable, Locally Advanced Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Oral Cavity: a Window of Opportunity Study

Status
Active, not recruiting
Phases
Phase 1Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03784066
Acronym
DUTRELASCO
Enrollment
21
Registered
2018-12-21
Start date
2018-08-27
Completion date
2026-03-24
Last updated
2024-07-03

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

Conditions

Oral Cavity Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Keywords

squamous cell carcinoma

Brief summary

This is a randomized, open-label, prospective, pilot phase I/II study with focus on translational research and on the evaluation of the biological changes that are observed in sequential tumor tissue acquisition in patients with newly diagnosed advanced (stage IV) oral cavity SCC. Patients are treated with Durvalumab (arm A) or Durvalumab + Tremelimumab (arm B) after biopsy-confirmed diagnosis of locally advanced resectable SCCHN of the oral cavity. After surgery, the standard of care treatment is radiotherapy, and, depending on risk assessment concurrent cisplatin. Patients will be treated with Durvalumab (arm A) or Durvalumab and Tremelimumab (arm B) during six additional cycles, starting from day one of the postoperative radiotherapy.

Detailed description

Durvalumab has shown activity in squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck. Locally advanced resectable cancers of this type represent a challenge, as the majority of these patients still die from this disease in spite of surgery, radio- and chemotherapy. Checkpoint inhibitors have recently proven to prolong life in recurrent/metastatic SCCHN, and several new molecules are currently tested in clinical trials in this indication, including PD-1, PD-L1, and CTLA-4 antibodies, either as single agent or in combination. These compounds might represent a valuable treatment for SCCHN patients in the adjuvant setting, given the favorable toxicity profile. Combination of Durvalumab (PD-L1 inhibition) and Tremelimumab (CTLA-4 inhibition) is currently tested in recurrent/metastatic head and neck cancer, and compared to Durvalumab as single agent, and to standard of care chemotherapy. In this study both options, i.e. durvalumab as a single agent or Durvalumab in combination with Tremelimumab, will be tested in a randomized fashion. Randomization would be used to reduce selection bias, in a non-comparative study. Newly diagnosed patients with SCCHN of the oral cavity, will be treated with a single dose of Durvalumab with or without Tremelimumab two weeks before scheduled surgery. When patients are first diagnosed with a resectable oral SCC, a biopsy is taken to confirm the diagnosis, and surgery is planned. This standard practice thus involves sequential tissue harvesting, both at the time of biopsy as well as the final resection specimen, making it possible to observe hallmarks of immune response when patients are treated once with Durvalumab with or without Tremelimumab after confirmation of the diagnosis on biopsy, but before surgery.

Interventions

DRUGDurvalumab

All patients will be treated with postoperative radiotherapy (66 Gy in standard fractionation). In case of positive section margins or extracapsular extension, 3 cycles of cisplatin 100 mg/msq on days 1, 22, and 43 will be added to standard fractionation radiotherapy (66 Gy). Durvalumab monotherapy (1500 mg) will be administered via IV infusion day -14 and at the start of radiation therapy, with repeat administration every 4 weeks at fixed dose for a total of 6 cycles postoperative.

COMBINATION_PRODUCTDurvalumab + Tremelimumab

All patients will be treated with postoperative radiotherapy (66 Gy in standard fractionation). In case of positive section margins or extracapsular extension, 3 cycles of cisplatin 100 mg/msq on days 1, 22, and 43 will be added to standard fractionation radiotherapy (66 Gy). Durvalumab + Tremelimumab combination therapy: Tremelimumab (75 mg) will be administered via IV infusion day -14 and at the start of radiation therapy, with repeat administration every 4 weeks at fixed dose for a total of 3 cycles postoperative, Durvalumab (1500 mg) will be administered via IV infusion day -14 and at the start of radiation therapy, with repeat administration every 4 weeks at fixed dose for a total of 6 cycles postoperative.

Sponsors

AstraZeneca
CollaboratorINDUSTRY
European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer - EORTC
CollaboratorNETWORK
Vlaams Instituut voor Biotechnologie (VIB)
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
Universitaire Ziekenhuizen KU Leuven
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Intervention model description

The primary objective is to evaluate the biological response in the tumor upon treatment with Durvalumab, and in parallel, with combination of Durvalumab and Tremelimumab.

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* Resectable locally advanced oral cavity SCC stage IV * Newly diagnosed disease * Age ≥18 years at the time of screening * Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 0 or 1 at enrollment * No active second malignancy during the last five years except non melanomatous skin cancer or carcinoma in situ of the cervix * No prior chemotherapy, radiotherapy or targeted therapy including PD-1, PD-L1 or CTLA-4 antibodies for SCCHN, including durvalumab or tremelimumab * Availability of blood samples for Translational research * Negative pregnancy test * Normal organ function * No participation in another interventional clinical trial in the preceding 30 days prior to randomization * Absence of any psychological, familial, sociological or geographical condition potentially hampering compliance with the study protocol and follow-up schedule; those conditions should be discussed with the patient before registration in the trial * Before patient registration, written informed consent must be given according to ICH/GCP, and national/local regulations * Body weight \> 30 kg

Exclusion criteria

* Histologically or cytologically confirmed head and neck cancer of any other primary anatomic location in the head and neck * Receipt of other treatments for cancer within 30 days prior to first dose of study treatment * Previous radiotherapy in the head and neck region * Previous systemic therapy for SCCHN * Current or prior use of immunosuppressive medication within 14 days before the first dose of their assigned IP. * History of allogeneic organ transplantation * Active or prior documented autoimmune or inflammatory * Uncontrolled intercurrent illness * Active relevant second malignancy during the last five years * Mean QT interval corrected for heart rate ≥470 ms * History of active primary immunodeficiency * Active infection Receipt of live, attenuated vaccine within 30 days prior to the first dose of IP. * Female patients of childbearing potential who are pregnant or breast- * Known allergy or hypersensitivity to IP or any IP excipient * Any condition that, in the opinion of the Investigator, would interfere with evaluation of the IP or interpretation of patient safety or study results * Major surgical procedure (as defined by the Investigator) within 28 days prior to the first dose of IP * Metastatic disease

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Evaluation of biological response in tumor tissue by means of difference in CD8 lymfocyte infiltration densityThe first biopsy will be harvested as part of the diagnostic screening procedures between day 28 and 14 before surgery. The second biopsy will be harvest from the resection specimen on day 0. IP will be given exactly 14 days before surgery.Difference in CD8 infiltration density will be evaluated on Formalin-Fixed Paraffin-Embedded sections. Measurements will be done both visually by trained pathologists and quantitative on immunofluorescence panel.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
ImagingAfter 14 days of treatment, prior to surgeryRECIST v1.1 will be used to compare MRI images to preoperative imaging in order to non-invasively detect potential radiological changes induced by the investigated drug.
68Ga-CXCR-4 PET/MR (optional)After 14 days of treatment, prior to surgeryRECIST v1.1 will be used to compare MRI images (as part of the 68Ga-CXCR-4 PET/MR) to preoperative imaging in order to: * assess the correlation of metabolic 68Ga-CXCR-4 PET/MR with immune response in the tumor * identify an imaging technique able to detect immunologic activity that could serve as an imaging biomarker to select early those patients that may benefit from durvalumab with or without tremelimumab.
Locoregional control in daysUp to 2 years after surgeryPatient follow up according to standard of care will include locoregional control, measured in days.
Time to treatment failure in daysUp to 2 years after surgeryPatient follow up according to standard of care will include time to treatment failure, measured in days.
Overall survival in daysUp to 5 years after surgeryOverall survival will be measured in days

Countries

Belgium

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 9, 2026