Phase I Trial of Intravenous Administration of PV701, an Oncolytic Virus, in Patients With Advanced Solid Cancers

Author:

Pecora Andrew L.1,Rizvi Naiyer1,Cohen Gary I.1,Meropol Neal J.1,Sterman Daniel1,Marshall John L.1,Goldberg Stuart1,Gross Peter1,O’Neil James D.1,Groene William S.1,Roberts M. Scot1,Rabin Harvey1,Bamat Michael K.1,Lorence Robert M.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Cancer Center at Hackensack University Medical Center, Hackensack, NJ; Lombardi Cancer Center, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC; The Cancer Center at Greater Baltimore Medical Center, Baltimore, and Pro-Virus, Inc, Gaithersburg, MD; and Fox Chase Cancer Center and University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA.

Abstract

PURPOSE: PV701, a replication-competent strain of Newcastle disease virus, causes regression of tumor xenografts after intravenous administration. This phase I study was designed to define the maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) and safety of single and multiple intravenous doses of PV701 as a single agent in patients with cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Seventy-nine patients with advanced solid cancers that were unresponsive to standard therapy were enrolled. Four PV701 intravenous dosing regimens were evaluated: (1) single dose: one dose every 28 days; (2) repeat dose: three doses in 1 week every 28 days; (3) desensitizing: one lower dose followed by two higher doses in 1 week every 28 days; and (4) two week: one lower dose followed by five higher doses over 2 weeks every 21 days. RESULTS: A 100-fold dose intensification was achieved over 195 cycles. A first-dose MTD of 12 × 109 plaque-forming units (PFU)/m2 was established for outpatient dosing. After an initial dose of 12 × 109 PFU/m2, patients tolerated an MTD for subsequent doses of 120 × 109 PFU/m2. The most common adverse events were flu-like symptoms that occurred principally after the first dose and were decreased in number and severity with each subsequent dose. Tumor site–specific adverse events and acute dosing reactions were also observed but not cumulative toxicity. Objective responses occurred at higher dose levels, and progression-free survival ranged from 4 to 31 months. Tumor tissue from one patient was obtained after 11 months of therapy and showed evidence of PV701 particles budding from the tumor cell membrane by electron microscopy and a pronounced lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate by histologic examination. CONCLUSION: PV701 warrants further study as a novel therapeutic agent for cancer patients.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

Reference39 articles.

1. Roberts S, Buasen PT, Incao BA, et al: PV701, a naturally attenuated strain of Newcastle disease virus, has a broad spectrum of oncolytic activity against human tumor xenografts. Proc Am Assoc Cancer Res 42: 454,2001 (abstr 2441)

2. Lorence RM, Roberts S, Groene WS, et al: Regression of human tumor xenografts following intravenous treatment using PV701, a naturally attenuated oncolytic strain of Newcastle disease virus. Proc Am Assoc Cancer Res 42: 454,2001 (abstr 2442)

3. Scientific Interest in Newcastle Disease Virus Is Reviving

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5. Newcastle disease virus selectively kills human tumor cells

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