Translational immune correlates of indirect antibody immunization in a randomized phase II study using scheduled combination therapy with carboplatin/paclitaxel plus oregovomab in ovarian cancer patients.
Alessandra BattagliaAlexia BuzzonettiMarco FossatiGiovanni ScambiaAndrea FattorossiMadi R MadiyalakanYolanda D MahnkeChristopher NicodemusPublished in: Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII (2020)
The standard-of-care (SOC) first-line therapy for ovarian cancer (OC) patients is plagued with high relapse rates. Several studies indicated the immune system's prominent role changing the disease course in OC patients. Chemo-immunotherapy regimens, currently being explored, include oregovomab, which is a monoclonal antibody specific for the OC associated antigen carbohydrate/cancer antigen 125 (CA125) that yielded promising results when administered together with SOC in a previous study. The QPT-ORE-002 multi-site phase II randomized study demonstrated that in patients with advanced OC, oregovomab combined with first-line SOC improved overall and progression-free survival, compared to SOC alone. The study included an Italian cohort in which we demonstrated that adding oregovomab to SOC resulted in increased patient numbers with amplified CA125-specific CD8+T lymphocytes/ml peripheral blood counts, which might explain the improved therapeutic effect of SOC + oregovomab over SOC alone. Predictive for oregovomab efficacy was a less suppressive immune environment at baseline as indicated by low numbers of circulating myeloid-derived suppressor cells, subset type 4, and a low neutrophil-and-monocyte to lymphocyte ratio.
Keyphrases
- peripheral blood
- phase ii study
- combination therapy
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- free survival
- newly diagnosed
- phase ii
- clinical trial
- chronic kidney disease
- induced apoptosis
- prognostic factors
- locally advanced
- radiation therapy
- randomized controlled trial
- photodynamic therapy
- cell proliferation
- quality improvement
- cell cycle arrest
- young adults
- signaling pathway
- pi k akt
- case report
- pain management
- rectal cancer
- lymph node metastasis