Periodic Reporting for period 6 - IMMUNOSABR (Clinical proof of concept through a randomised phase II study: a combination of immunotherapy and stereotactic ablative radiotherapy as a curative treatment for limited metastatic lung cancer)
Período documentado: 2024-01-01 hasta 2024-12-31
Within this randomized phase II ImmunoSABR trial, the combination of RT with or without the immunocytokine L19-IL2 with or without ICI has been tested as 1st, 2nd or 3rd line treatment in stage IV NSCLC patients. This bi-modal and triple treatment approach was based on the direct cytotoxic effect of radiotherapy, the tumour selective immunocytokine L19-IL2, the abscopal effect observed distant from the irradiated metastatic site(s), and the memory effect.
The multicentric, randomised controlled open-label phase II clinical trial (NCT03705403) was carried out to test the hypothesis that the combination of RT and L19-IL2 increases the progression free survival (PFS) in patients with limited metastatic NSCLC.
ImmunoSABR’s consortium consists of 14 participating centres located in 6 countries. Primary endpoint was PFS at 1.5 years based, and secondary endpoints were overall survival, toxicity, quality of life and abscopal response. Associative biomarker studies, blood and tumour cell immune monitoring, CT-based radiomics, stool collection, iRECIST, and tumour growth rate have been performed.
Patients were stratified according to their metastatic load (oligo-metastatic: up to 5, or poly-metastatic: 6 to 10 metastases). Patients have been randomised by minimisation to the experimental (E-arm) or the control arm (C-arm). The C-arm received SOC, according to the local protocol. E-arm oligo-metastatic patients received RT to all lesions followed by L19-IL2 therapy; radiotherapy for poly-metastatic patients consisted of irradiation of at least one (symptomatic) to a maximum of 5 lesions (including ICI in both arms if this is the SOC).
The large majority of patients with metastatic cancer are treated with palliative intent. The IMMUNOSABR consortium identifies the ‘limited disease state’ as a unique subset of metastatic cancer patients with ≤10 metastatic sites for which curative treatment regimens such as SABR show very promising results. IMMUNOSABR used this innovative approach in metastatic diseases for the development of a powerful strategy with curative intent. IMMUNOSABR aimed to prolong survival (increase PFS) with an acceptable toxicity profile in patients with limited tumour metastases. IMMUNOSABR intended to have a profound impact on the cancer care by offering a curative treatment strategy for metastatic cancer complemented with a biomarker strategy to identify patients who will benefit from treatment. After multiple challenging factors (such as the COVID-19pandemy ) IMMUNOSABR had to close recruitment after enrolling 88 patients instead of the intended 126 patients. Several innovations developed through this project will be adopted by companies for clinical implementation, ultimately improving patient outcomes and contributing to the growth of Europe’s knowledge-based economy.