This prospective randomized trial evaluates the efficacy and safety of combining 125I seed interstitial brachytherapy with immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy in patients with primary, recurrent, or metastatic malignant tumors. Immunotherapy has become an important systemic treatment option, yet many patients experience limited benefit due to low tumor immunogenicity, insufficient T-cell infiltration, and an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. 125I seed brachytherapy provides continuous low-dose-rate radiation to the tumor, promoting antigen release, enhancing dendritic cell activation, and potentially converting immunologically "cold" tumors into more responsive "hot" lesions. Integrating localized radiation with systemic immunotherapy may improve tumor response, prolong progression-free survival, and reduce recurrence. Patients will be randomized 1:1 to receive 125I seed implantation plus immunotherapy or immunotherapy alone. The primary endpoints are objective response rate (ORR) and progression-free survival (PFS). Secondary endpoints include failure-free survival (FFS), overall survival (OS), disease control rate (DCR), duration of response (DoR), local control, recurrence rate, adverse events, and quality of life. Exploratory analyses will assess radiomics features, subgroup responses, and different patterns of recurrence. This study aims to determine whether adding 125I seed brachytherapy enhances the clinical benefits of immunotherapy across diverse malignant tumors.
Patients with malignant tumors-including primary, recurrent, and metastatic disease-often exhibit heterogeneous responses to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). Limited tumor antigen exposure, poor immune infiltration, and an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment frequently restrict the efficacy of immunotherapy. Strategies capable of enhancing local tumor immunogenicity and promoting systemic immune activation may improve clinical outcomes. 125I seed interstitial brachytherapy delivers continuous low-dose-rate radiation precisely to the tumor, offering both durable local control and immunomodulatory effects. Low-dose-rate irradiation can induce immunogenic tumor cell death, increase tumor antigen presentation, enhance dendritic cell activation, and promote T-cell recruitment. This process may convert immunologically inactive ("cold") tumors into immunologically active ("hot") lesions, thereby synergizing with ICIs to enhance anti-tumor immunity. Combining these modalities may improve objective response, delay treatment failure, reduce recurrence, and prolong survival. This prospective, randomized, open-label, parallel-group trial will compare 125I seed brachytherapy plus immunotherapy with immunotherapy alone. Eligible patients will be randomized 1:1. The combination arm will receive CT-guided seed implantation followed by ICI therapy; the control arm will receive ICI monotherapy. All patients will undergo standardized imaging and clinical evaluations at pre-defined intervals. The primary endpoints are objective response rate (ORR) and progression-free survival (PFS). Secondary endpoints include failure-free survival (FFS), overall survival, disease control rate, duration of response, local control rate, tumor recurrence rate, treatment-related and immune-related adverse events, and patient-reported quality of life. Exploratory analyses will investigate radiomics features associated with response, patterns of recurrence (local, regional, or distant), and subgroup differences across tumor types, disease stages, biomarker profiles, and treatment characteristics. These analyses may help identify imaging or clinical predictors of benefit, refine patient selection, and support biomarker-driven optimization of 125I seed brachytherapy combined with immunotherapy.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
90
Examples include PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors (e.g., pembrolizumab, nivolumab, camrelizumab, sintilimab) Administered per standard dosing schedule (e.g., every 2-3 weeks)
PET/CT-guided implantation or CT-guided implantation Dose planning: D90 typically 90-140 Gy (adjusted per tumor type and size) Post-implant dosimetry: D90, V100, V150 recorded
Same agent class and dosing schedule as the experimental arm Administered until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or study completion
The 960th Hospital of People's Liberation Army (PLA)
Jinan, Shandong, China
Objective Response Rate (ORR)
Proportion of patients achieving complete response (CR) or partial response (PR) as defined by RECIST 1.1 or iRECIST, assessed via CT/MRI/PET-CT.
Time frame: Every 6-12 weeks, up to 24 months
Progression-Free Survival (PFS)
Time from randomization to radiographic disease progression or death from any cause.
Time frame: Up to 24 months
Failure-Free Survival (FFS)
Time from randomization to the first occurrence of treatment failure, including disease progression, local recurrence, distant metastasis, discontinuation due to adverse events, or death.
Time frame: Up to 24 months
Overall Survival (OS)
Time from randomization to death from any cause.
Time frame: Up to 36 months
Disease Control Rate (DCR)
Percentage of patients achieving CR, PR, or stable disease (SD), according to RECIST 1.1/iRECIST.
Time frame: Every 6-12 weeks, up to 24 months
Duration of Response (DoR)
Time from first documentation of CR/PR until radiographic progression or death.
Time frame: Up to 24 months
Local Control Rate (LCR)
Proportion of treated lesions without local progression, based on imaging (CT/MRI/PET-CT) and dosimetric correlation of the implanted region.
Time frame: Up to 24 months
Tumor Recurrence Rate
Rate of local or regional tumor recurrence, defined by new lesions or regrowth within the same anatomical region as confirmed by imaging.
Time frame: Up to 24 months
Treatment-Related Adverse Events (TRAEs)
Incidence, severity, and type of adverse events associated with treatment, graded according to CTCAE v5.0.
Time frame: From baseline until 90 days after last treatment
Immune-Related Adverse Events (irAEs)
Incidence and grade of immunotherapy-related toxicities such as pneumonitis, colitis, dermatitis, endocrinopathies.
Time frame: Up to 24 months
Quality of Life (QoL)
Assessed using validated patient-reported instruments (e.g., EORTC QLQ-C30).
Time frame: Baseline, Week 12, Week 24, and every 6 months up to 24 months
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