Safety and efficacy of neoadjuvant intravesical oncolytic MV-NIS in patients undergoing radical cystectomy (RC) for urothelial carcinoma but ineligible for neoadjuvant cisplatin-based chemotherapy.

Authors

null

Bradley C. Leibovich

Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN

Bradley C. Leibovich , Tanner Miest , Paul R Young , Mark L. Gonzalgo , Stephen A. Boorjian , Matthew K. Tollefson , R. Jeffrey Karnes , Igor Frank , Timothy D. Lyon , Tessa Kroeninger , Shruthi Naik , Monica Reckner , Rosa M Diaz , Stephen Kaesshaefer , Ena Whitelaw , Bethany A Brunton , Alysha Newsom , Nandakumar Packiriswamy , Kah Whye Peng , Alice Susannah Bexon

Organizations

Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, Vyriad, Rochester, MN, Bexon Clinical Consulting LLC, Montclair, NJ, Vyriad and Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN

Research Funding

U.S. National Institutes of Health
U.S. National Institutes of Health, Pharmaceutical/Biotech Company

Background: Bladder cancer is a leading cause of cancer death in the United States. Over 90% of bladder cancer cases are urothelial carcinomas (UC) that may present as a non-muscle-invasive (NMIBC) or muscle-invasive disease (MIBC). Standard of care for NMIBC includes transurethral resection of bladder tumor (TURBT), intravesical chemotherapy and immunotherapy with Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG). Patients (pts) with high-grade BCG-refractory NMIBC or MIBC undergo RC, which involves complete bladder removal and pelvic lymphadenectomy. RC severely impacts quality of life with significant morbidity. Oncolytic viruses are showing promise in UC, and MV-NIS has proven efficacy in other tumor types. MV-NIS is an investigational oncolytic measles virus with an excellent safety profile, irrespective of route of administration (n > 100). MV-NIS-related adverse events are limited to infusion reactions and transient CBC changes, and little local toxicity is anticipated with intravesical therapy. Clinical efficacy of this oncolytic may be related to absence of measles immunity. Based on this, the clinical strategy for MV-NIS is focused on targeting immune-privileged sites via intra-tumoral or intravesical routes, alone or in combination with checkpoint inhibitors. We hypothesize that intravesical therapy with oncolytic MV-NIS can improve clinical outcomes for (a) BCG refractory NMIBC pts to avoid or delay the need for RC; and (b) MIBC pts undergoing RC. Methods: This study is enrolling pts undergoing RC who are ineligible to receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy. The trial has 2 stages to (a) determine the safety and tolerability of intravesical MV-NIS, and (b) assess preliminary efficacy. Part (a) includes 4-24 pts in a timing cohort with doses administered at increasing durations (1-4 weeks) prior to RC to establish safety of a single MV-NIS dose. Part (b) includes an expansion cohort (n = 12) to evaluate the safety and efficacy of 2 intravesical doses of MV-NIS at 2-week intervals prior to RC. Safety is assessed using NCI-CTCAE V5 and Clavien-Dindo grading of operative complications. The efficacy endpoint is pathologic stage at time of RC (pT0 rate), which can be compared to pre-study TURBT stage. Additional exploratory studies include PK and PD analyses in urine, blood and tumor. Enrollment is ongoing at 2 Mayo Clinic sites (Rochester, MN and Jacksonville, FL) and the study has now progressed from the timing cohort into the expansion cohort. Clinical trial information: NCT03171493.

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2020 ASCO Virtual Scientific Program

Session Type

Poster Session

Session Title

Developmental Therapeutics—Immunotherapy

Track

Developmental Therapeutics—Immunotherapy

Sub Track

Other IO-Related Topics

Clinical Trial Registration Number

NCT03171493

Citation

J Clin Oncol 38: 2020 (suppl; abstr TPS3172)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2020.38.15_suppl.TPS3172

Abstract #

TPS3172

Poster Bd #

236

Abstract Disclosures