Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Head and Neck (SCCHN) is a devastating illness, the treatment of which is associated with significant morbidity. This type of cancer affects 43,000 individuals each year with an estimated survival rate of 50%. A potential treatment alternative for this patient population is the use of peptide-based immunotherapy. This clinical tial will be using a vaccines comprised on the Trojan peptides MAGE-A3 and HPV 16 to treat patients with Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Head and Neck who have recurrent, progressive or metastatic SCCHN.
Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Head and Neck affects 43,000 individuals in the United States annually with an estimated overall survival rate of 50%. In order to improve both the survival rate and quality of life for patients who develop unresectable disease recurrence, new therapeutic alternatives are mandated. One potential treatment alternative for this patient population is the use of peptide-based immunotherapy. Despite the success fo preclinical studies using peptide vaccines, therapeutic responses in patients have been sporadic. The reasons for failure are multifactorial and include problems with patient selection, a limited number of antigenic targets, and an inability to correlate immunologic response with therapeutic efficacy. Specifically, patients with disseminated SCCHN have defects in antigen processing, presentation and effector mechanisms that limit their ability to respond to T cell based immunotherapy. Additionally, a paucity of antigenic peptide epitopes are defined for SCCHN, and immunologic monitoring does not correlate well with clinical response. Recently several investigators, including our research team, have identified a high prevalence of MAGE-A3 and HPV 16 on SCCHN, and characterized several putative cytolytic and helper epitopes. Additionally, we have defined a novel method to enhance the immune response to therapeutic peptide vaccines using Trojan complexes composed of CD4 and CD8 T-cell epitopes, connected by furin cleavable linkers. In order to define the feasibility and safety of these agents in combination with GM-CSF and montanide ISA 51 for the immunotherapy of SCCHN, in this proposed trial, we will screen patients for immunologic competence based on specific eligibility criteria including both antigen and HLA-A2 expression on tumors. In registered patients, we will test the ability of two novel Trojan peptide complexes, composed of MAGE-A3 and human papilloma virus 16 (HPV 16) epitopes, to stimulate antigen-specific CD 4 and CD 8 T-cell responses. Finally, we will correlate immunologic response with cell dose and the generation of both HPV 16 and MAGE-A3 antigen loss and HLA-A2 loss variants on tumors by evaluating patients for: 1) Changes in tumor size by both physical measurement and CT plus PET measurement; 2) Determining what proportions of individuals who achieve a complete response (CR), partial response (PR), or have stable disease (SD); 3) Progression-free survival; 4) Survival. Successful completion of this clinical trial will result in the development of a strong foundation for a Phase II/III clinical trial using HPV 16 and MAGE-A3 Trojan peptides for the immunotherapy of SCCHN.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
17
Three dose levels of MAGE-A3 vaccine will be tested : 500ug, 1000 ug and 1500 ug
Three dose levels of HPV- 16 vaccine will be tested : 500ug, 1000 ug and 1500 ug
University of Maryland School of Medicine
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Number of participants experiencing toxicity
Maximum grade of each toxicity and percentage of patients experiencing toxicity as assessed by CTCAE v4.0
Time frame: 2 year
Tumor response
Tumor response as assessed by RECIST
Time frame: 4 years
Tumor infiltrating lymphocytes
analysis will be performed to assess the degree of tumor infiltration by lymphocytes per- and post treatment (if possible)
Time frame: 4 years
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