scholarly journals A two-arm, randomized, controlled, multi-centric, open-label Phase-2 study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Itolizumab in moderate to severe ARDS patients due to COVID-19

Author(s):  
Suresh Kumar ◽  
Rosemarie de Souza ◽  
Milind Nadkar ◽  
Randeep Guleria ◽  
Anjan Trikha ◽  
...  

AbstractAn uncontrolled increase in cytokine production may lead to systemic hyperinflammation, vascular hypo-responsiveness, increased endothelial permeability, hypercoagulation, multi-organ dysfunction and eventually death in moderate to severely ill COVID-19 patients. Targeting T-cells, an important driver of the hyperinflammatory response, in the treatment of COVID-19, could potentially reduce mortality and improve survival rates. Itolizumab is an anti-CD6 humanized monoclonal antibody with an immunomodulating action on Teffector cells that downregulates T-cell activation, proliferation and subsequent production of various chemokines and cytokines. The efficacy and safety of Itolizumab for the treatment of cytokine release syndrome in patients with moderate to severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) due to COVID-19 was evaluated in a multi-centric, open-label, two-arm, controlled, randomized, phase 2 study. Eligible patients were randomized (2:1) to arm A (best supportive care + Itolizumab) and arm B (best supportive care). The primary outcome of interest was reduction in all-cause mortality 30 days after enrolment. Thirty-six patients were screened, 5 were treated as first dose sentinels and the rest were randomized, whilst 4 patients were considered screen failures. Two patients in the Itolizumab treatment arm discontinued prior to receiving the first dose and were replaced. At the end of 1 month, there were 3 deaths in arm B, and none in arm A (p= 0.0296). At the end of the follow-up period, more patients in Arm A had improved SpO2 without increasing FiO2 (p=0.0296), improved PaO2 (p=0.0296), and reduction in IL-6 (43 pg/ml vs 212 pg/ml; p=0.0296) and tumor necrotic factor-α (9 pg/ml vs 39 pg/ml; p=0.0253) levels. Itolizumab was generally safe and well tolerated, and transient lymphopenia (11 patients in Arm A) and infusion reactions (7 patients) were the commonly reported treatment related safety events. These encouraging results indicate that larger clinical trials are warranted to establish the role of Itolizumab in controlling immune hyperactivation in COVID-19.

2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi53-vi53
Author(s):  
David Tran ◽  
Ashley Ghinaseddin ◽  
Dongjiang Chen ◽  
Maryam Rahman

Abstract INTRODUCTION Emerging data indicate that TTFields, the new anti-mitotic treatment for GBM, stimulate immunity via the type-1 interferon (T1IFN) pathway of STING and AIM2 inflammasomes. Thus, we hypothesize that TTFields synergize with immune checkpoint inhibitors to induce anti-tumor immunity in GBM. METHODS We conduct a phase 2 study combining pembrolizumab, TTFields and maintenance TMZ in 25 patients with newly diagnosed GBM (ndGBM). To distinguish immune effects of TTFields from pembrolizumab, TTFields is started at cycle 1 of TMZ and pembrolizumab (200mg Q3Wks) at cycle 2. The primary endpoint is PFS vs. the historical control of TTFields plus TMZ (JAMA/318:2306-2316). Secondary endpoints include toxicity, immune signature of TTFields vs. pembrolizumab by single-cell RNAseq of PBMCs, and OS. RESULTS As of 05/24/2021, 25 patients with a median age of 61 years were enrolled. Eight (32%) and 4 (16%) had biopsy only and partial resection, respectively. Eighteen (72%) had unmethylated MGMT and 3 (12%) had an IDH mutation. The median follow-up was 14.7 months. Twelve (48%) were progression-free, and 15 (60%) were alive. Of 19 patients with follow-up >=9 months, the median PFS was >=11.2 months vs. 6.7 months in the control. Six (24%) patients with measureable tumors achieved partial to complete response. The most common serious adverse events were thrombosis, seizure, and metabolic disturbances in 4 (16%), 3 (12%), and 2 (8%) patients, respectively. We sequenced 193,760 PBMCs in 12 patients before pembrolizumab and detected robust post-TTFields T cell activation in 11 of 12 patients via the T1IFN trajectory with a strong correlation with the TCRab clonal expansion Simpson index (Spearman coefficient r=-0.8, P=0.014). Importantly, we defined a T cell-based gene signature of TTFields effects on TCRab clonal expansion. CONCLUSION The triple combination is well tolerated and shows early evidence of efficacy in ndGBM patients. Survival and molecular data will be updated.


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