Department of Medical Oncology, National Center for Tumor Diseases, University Hospital Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany
Georg Martin Haag , Niels Halama , Christoph Springfeld , Barbara Grün , Leonidas Apostolidis , Stefanie Zschaebitz , Mareike Dietrich , Anne-Katrin Berger , Tim Frederik Weber , Inka Zoernig , Lisa Waberer , Daniel Wilhelm Mueller , Salah-Eddin Al-Batran , Dirk Jaeger
Background: Checkpoint inhibition using PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors does not show clinically relevant activity in MSS/pMMR (Mismatch Repair Proficient) colorectal cancer. Previous work showed that inhibition of CCR5 (C-C chemokine receptor type 5) leads to a macrophage re-polarization towards M1 macrophages within the tumor microenvironment which directly affects immune cell infiltrates. The current phase I trial explores a combined modification of the innate immune system (by CCR 5 blockade) and the adaptive immune system (by PD-1 inhibition) in the treatment of MSS CRC. Methods: 20 patients with metastatic MSS/pMMR colorectal cancer with failure of fluoropyrimidines, oxaliplatin, irinotecan, VEGF antibodies and EGFR antibodies (in ras WT patients) received pembrolizumab 200 mg q21d and maraviroc 300 mg bid cont. for 8 cycles, followed by pembrolizumab monotherapy for a maximum of 24 additional cycles. Imaging was performed every nine weeks (RECIST and irRECIST criteria). Primary endpoint was the feasibility rate (rate of patients receiving the protocol treatment during the core treatment without special event: treatment-related Grade ≥ 3 immune-related abnormalities, treatment-related Grade ≥ 4 AEs or any toxicity-related premature withdrawal of treatment). Secondary endpoints included safety/toxicity, ORR, PFS and OS. Results: 20 patients were enrolled. The median number of applied cycles was 3.5 for pembrolizumab and 3.5 for maraviroc. Two patients completed the core treatment period with pembrolizumab and started maintenance treatment. The feasibility rate was 94.7% (90% CI 77.4 to 99.7%), with one patient experiencing a special event. Except this grade 4 event (hyperglycemia) no ≥ 3 treatment-related toxicities were observed. According to irRECIST criteria one patient showed a partial response and one a stable disease as best response, resulting in an irDCR of 10.5%. Median PFS according to irRECIST was 2 months (CI 95%, 2 to 3), median OS 9 months (CI 95%, 6 to 20). Conclusions: Therapy with pembrolizumab and maraviroc was feasible and showed a beneficial toxicity pattern. Clinical activity in MSS CRC patients was limited, however prolonged disease stabilizations were observed in single patients and overall survival was higher than expected in this heavily pretreated population. Clinical trial information: NCT03274804.
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