State Key Laboratory of Oncology in South China, Collaborative Innovation Center for Cancer Medicine, Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China
Rui-hua Xu , Sung-Bae Kim , David Tougeron , Yunxia Zuo , Haiyuan Yang , Juan Zhang , Jingwen Shi , Eric Van Cutsem
Background: The programmed death-1 (PD-1)/PD-L1 pathway plays an important role in tumor induced immunosuppression. PD-L1 overexpression is observed in approximately 30–60% of esophageal cancers and is associated with poor prognosis. Anti-PD-1 agents demonstrate moderate efficacy in PD-L1-positive esophageal cancer in terms of response rate and overall survival, however, long-term outcomes remain poor due to primary and secondary resistance driven by tumor immune escape. The T-cell immunoglobulin and immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory motif domain (TIGIT) is upregulated on T-cells and natural killer cells in multiple solid tumors, which can inhibit anticancer immune responses. Ociperlimab (BGB-A1217) is a novel, humanized, monoclonal antibody that binds TIGIT with high specificity and affinity, blocking the interaction with its ligands on tumor cells. Preclinical and clinical studies suggest that dual targeting with anti-TIGIT and anti-PD-1 antibodies produces synergistic immune cell activation and enhanced antitumor activity. Methods: AdvanTIG-203 is a Phase 2, global, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study (NCT04732494) of patients with unresectable, locally advanced, recurrent or metastatic ESCC, who progressed on or after 1st line systemic therapy and whose tumors express PD-L1 (visually-estimated combined positive score ≥ 10%). After stratification by Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status (0 or 1), number of metastatic sites (≤ 1 or ≥ 2) and region (Asian or non-Asian), 280 patients will be randomized (1:1) to either ociperlimab 900 mg intravenous (IV) plus tislelizumab 200 mg IV every 3 weeks (Q3W), or tislelizumab plus placebo Q3W, until disease progression (per RECIST v1.1), unacceptable toxicity, death or withdrawal of consent. Co-primary endpoints are investigator-assessed overall response rate (ORR) and overall survival (OS) in the intention-to-treat population. A sample size of 280 patients was estimated to provide approximately 94.8% power to detect a 20% difference in ORR at a one-sided significance level of 0.025. With 198 deaths, the study was estimated to provide approximately 86% power to detect a hazard ratio of 0.65 for OS. Secondary endpoints are ORR by independent review, progression-free survival, duration of response, disease control rate, and clinical benefit rate per investigator and independent assessment, cancer-specific health-related quality of life (HRQoL), and safety. Exploratory endpoints include but are not limited to expression of TIGIT, CD226, CD155, CD112, and PD-L1, pharmacokinetics, immunogenicity, and generic HRQoL measures. Clinical trial information: NCT04732494.
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Abstract Disclosures
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