The purpose of the Phase I study is to see if it is safe to use X-ray photon radiation (XRT) and proton radiation (PT) before surgery in patients with recurrent head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (rHNSCC). The purpose of the Phase II study is to see if using XRT or PT before immunotherapy (pembrolizumab) prior to surgery benefits patients with recurrent head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (rHNSCC).
In phase I, cohorts of 3 to 6 patients will be treated with 3 fractions of RT prior to surgery. A de-escalation cohort is planned if toxicity is exceeded in Cohort 1. The types of RT (XRT and PT) will be tested sequentially. The first cohort will include XRT followed by salvage surgery and adjuvant immunotherapy. The RP2D or dose found to be safe will be decided for XRT first. The RP2D for XRT will then be the starting dose cohort for PT to ensure the dose remains safe. The highest dose found to be safe for both types of RT will be used for Phase II. The dose escalation criteria must be met at each dose level including up to 28 days post-surgical resection in order to enroll and treat pts for phase II or de-escalate to the indicated dose level. Phase II is a two arm window of opportunity multi-center study investigating XRT or PT with PD-1 inhibition in recurrent HNSCC. The study will be conducted in two stages with 2 independent experimental arms based on a Simons 2 Stage Design. PT followed by PD-1 inhibition (Arm 1) or XRT followed by PD-1 inhibition (Arm 2) will be independently compared to a historical control group with the primary endpoint of major pathological response (MPR) and a goal of 35% of patients achieving MPR compared to a baseline of 10% with PD-1 alone. Forty total patients with recurrent HNSCC will be screened and randomized to avoid selection bias to either PT or XRT. Based on a Simon Stage 2 Design, nine patients are required for stage I. Stage II will proceed after determination of Stage I MPR.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
40
Proton therapy is a type of radiation therapy that uses protons rather than x-rays. It painlessly delivers radiation to treat some types of cancer.
PDL-1 immunotherapy drug
University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
RECRUITINGDose Limiting Toxicity (DLT) Evaluation defined as the number of subjects experiencing a major, non-grade 5 adverse event as defined by CTCAE v6 or a grade 5 adverse event as defined by CTCAE 6.
To determine DLTs during Phase I to determine the recommended Phase 2 dose. A DLT is defined as experiencing ≥ Gr 4 AEs prior to surgery, a delay in surgery past 5 wks from RT, or ≥ Gr 4 surgical complications or Grade 5 adverse events are defined as deaths occurring during the study period, regardless of attribution, as assessed using CTCAE v6.0 criteria.
Time frame: From the initiation of study treatment to 28 days post resection.
Major Pathologic Response (MPR) defined as less than 10% viable tumor on resected tumor specimen.
To determine the major pathological response (MPR) in patients undergoing neoadjuvant X-ray photon radiation (XRT) or proton radiation (PT) with pembrolizumab followed by surgical salvage compared to a historical control group undergoing salvage surgery with PD-1 alone.
Time frame: Surgery - Week 4
Disease Free Survival as measured from time of surgery until either disease recurrence or death from any cause.
To determine the disease-free survival (DFS) in patients undergoing neoadjuvant XRT or PT followed by surgical salvage compared to a historical control group undergoing salvage surgery alone. DFS is defined as the duration from time of surgery until either disease progression, recurrence or death due to any cause.
Time frame: Surgery - Week 4 through 5 years
Safety using CTCAE v6.0 and toxicity evaluation.
To determine the safety of neoadjuvant pembrolizumab combined with XRT or PT prior to salvage surgery.
Time frame: 5 years
Trisha Wise-Draper, MD
CONTACT
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.