The Effects of Treatment With Vemurafenib on the Immune System in Advanced Melanoma

NCT ID: NCT01942993

Last Updated: 2020-09-30

Study Results

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Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

TERMINATED

Clinical Phase

PHASE2

Total Enrollment

3 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2013-09-30

Study Completion Date

2015-11-30

Brief Summary

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Approximately 40-60 % of cutaneous melanomas select for a mutation in a protein called BRAF which is part of a signaling pathway called the Mitogen Activated Protein Kinase (MAPK) pathway. When BRAF is mutated the MAPK pathway remains active allowing for melanoma to grow. Vemurafenib is an oral treatment which blocks the activity of BRAF which leads to decreasing the activity of the MAPK pathway. When patients with melanoma expressing specific mutation in BRAF are treated with vemurafenib approximately 50% will develop a response to treatment with shrinkage of tumor. When compared to a standard chemotherapy called dacarbazine used to treat melanoma, treatment with vemurafenib leads to a statistically significant overall survival or living longer benefit. Because of this survival benefit vemurafenib was Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved for the treatment of metastatic melanoma expressing a BRAF mutation called V600E BRAF. There is increasing evidence that the immune system can also be important in affecting melanoma growth and survival and there are immune treatments FDA approved for the treatment of metastatic melanoma. There is some limited evidence that blocking BRAF with vemurafenib may affect the activity of components of the immune system. It is important to better characterize and understand the effects of vemurafenib treatment on various components of the immune system. The purpose of this study is to systematically evaluate the effects of vemurafenib treatment (at FDA approved dosing regimen) on parts of the immune systems called the innate and adaptive immune systems. The hypothesis is that vemurafenib treatment will affect the immune system.

Detailed Description

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Approximately 40-60 % of cutaneous melanomas select for a mutation in the BRAF protein which is part of a signaling pathway called the Mitogen Activated Protein Kinase (MAPK) pathway. Over 90% of mutations in BRAF occur at position V600 with the most common being a V600E mutation. Mutation at position V600 of BRAF activates the MAPK pathway which facilitates melanoma proliferation and growth. The response rate to treatment with vemurafenib in patients with stage IV melanoma expressing a V600E BRAF mutation is approximately 50%. A phase III study comparing first line treatment with vemurafenib compared to standard dacarbazine chemotherapy demonstrated a statistically significant overall survival benefit in this patient population. Based on this survival benefit vemurafenib was FDA approved for treatment of stage IV melanoma expressing a V600E BRAF mutation. Vemurafenib is administered at a dose of 960 milligrams orally twice daily.

While targeting BRAF can lead to survival benefits in patients with melanoma expressing BRAF mutation it is becoming increasingly apparent that the immune system is important in modulating the growth of melanoma. As such there are immune therapies FDA approved for the treatment of stage IV melanoma including ipilimumab which confers an overall survival benefit by activating the immune system through inhibition of the CTLA-4 protein expressed on certain T-cells. Little is known about how the exposure of different classes of immune cells to vemurafenib modulates the activity of the immune system. We do know that many melanomas express differentiation antigens which could potentially be recognized by the immune system. This recognition could potentially be utilized in the development of novel immunotherapeutic treatment approaches. The pharmacologic inhibition of the MAPK pathway does lead to increased expression of various melanoma differentiation antigens along with improved recognition by antigen-specific T-lymphocytes. Evaluation of a limited number of tumor biopsy specimens suggest that the infiltration of melanomas by CD4+ and CD8+ T-lymphocytes markedly increases following treatment with a BRAF inhibitor. Furthermore the viability and function (determined using assays for cytokine release assays and cytotoxic activity) of T-lymphocytes was not negatively affected by exposure to vemurafenib at concentrations known to cause anti-tumor effects.

The MAPK pathway is a pathway utilized by many cell types including immune cells and cells in the tumor microenvironment. As such vemurafenib could potentially modulate the activity of the MAPK pathway in the melanoma cells, immune cells, and components of the tumor microenvironment. Effects of vemurafenib on tumor cells may directly lead to changes in antigen presentation and effects on the innate and adaptive immune systems could potentially alter recognition of tumor cells and modulate positively or negatively immune recognition and antitumor activity. Therefore, a better understanding of immune modulation induced by anti-BRAF therapy should provide data to model and develop in a more rational fashion therapies which combine BRAF targeted and immune modulatory agents potentially using such agents as ipilimumab or anti-PD1 or anti-PDL1 antibodies.

Conditions

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Melanoma

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Vemurafenib

960 mg (four tablets of 240 mg each) of vemurafenib PO BID

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Vemurafenib

Intervention Type DRUG

Vemurafenib will be administered at the FDA approved dose of 960 mg approximately 12 hours apart with or without a meal. Vemurafenib is provided at 240-mg film-coated tablets packed in bottles for oral administration. Vemurafenib should be swallowed whole with a glass of water and the medication should not be chewed or crushed. Management of symptomatic adverse events may require dose reductions, treatment interruptions, or treatment discontinuation. Dose reductions below 480 mg twice daily are not recommended.

Interventions

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Vemurafenib

Vemurafenib will be administered at the FDA approved dose of 960 mg approximately 12 hours apart with or without a meal. Vemurafenib is provided at 240-mg film-coated tablets packed in bottles for oral administration. Vemurafenib should be swallowed whole with a glass of water and the medication should not be chewed or crushed. Management of symptomatic adverse events may require dose reductions, treatment interruptions, or treatment discontinuation. Dose reductions below 480 mg twice daily are not recommended.

Intervention Type DRUG

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Histologically confirmed stage IV or unresectable stage III melanoma with documented BRAF V600 mutation
* Age \> 18 years
* ECOG Performance Status 0,1, or 2
* Measurable disease by RECIST v1.1
* Adequate organ function: Hemoglobin \> 9 g/dl, ANC\> 1.5 x 109/L, platelets \> 100 x 109/L, AST and ALT \< 2.5 x upper limit of normal, bilirubin \< 1.5 x upper limit normal, Cr \< 1.5 x upper limit normal
* Adequate recovery from prior systemic or local melanoma therapy. No systemic anticancer therapy in the 4 weeks and no ipilimumab in the 6 weeks from planned vemurafenib administration. No radiation therapy in 2 weeks prior to date plan to initiate vemurafenib treatment and no surgery in 3 weeks prior to date of planned vemurafenib administration.
* Agreement for females of childbearing potential use 2 acceptable methods contraception. Men with female partners of childbearing potential must agree to use of latex condom and advise female partner to use additional method contraception during the study and 6 months after discontinuation of vemurafenib
* Negative serum or urine pregnancy test within 7 days prior to and including the morning of day -7 (first potential day of research blood draw and tumor biopsy)
* Agreement not to donate blood or blood products or to donate sperm during the study and for at least 6 months after discontinuation of vemurafenib.

Exclusion Criteria

* Prior vemurafenib treatment
* Use of oral or intravenous corticosteroids or other immunosuppressive medications such as cyclosporine or azathioprine. Subjects must not have received any systemic immunosuppressive drug such as corticosteroids for at least 2 weeks prior to study entry. Maintenance inhaled corticosteroids for controlled asthma or COPD or maintenance systemic steroids to correct autoimmune endocrinopathy due to prior ipilimumab treatment is allowed as is the use of topical steroids and anti-inflammatory eye drops.
* Symptomatic CNS metastases requiring steroid use.
* No active second malignancy
* Pregnant or breast feeding
* Mean QTc interval \> 450 (triplicate ECGs) or history congenital prolonged QT interval
* Any of the following within 3 months prior to study drug administration: myocardial infarction, unstable angina, symptomatic congestive heart failure, cerebrovascular accident or transient ischemic attack, or pulmonary embolism
* Inability to swallow pills
* Ongoing cardiac dysrhythmia \>2 (per NCI CTCAE, v4.0)
* Unwillingness to practice birth control
* Inability to comply with requirements of the protocol
* Uncontrolled medical illness such as infection requiring intravenous antibiotics.
* Known allergy to treatment medication (vemurafenib)
* Known active or chronic infection with HIV.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Genentech, Inc.

INDUSTRY

Sponsor Role collaborator

Philip Friedlander

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Philip Friedlander

Assistant Professor

Responsibility Role SPONSOR_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Philip Friedlander, MD, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Locations

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Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

New York, New York, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

Other Identifiers

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GCO 13-0427

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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