Adjuvant Wilms’ tumour 1-specific dendritic cell immunotherapy
complementing conventional therapy for paediatric patients with high-grade
glioma and diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma: protocol of a monocentric phase
I/II clinical trial in Belgium
Author:
Van Genechten ToonORCID,
De Laere Maxime,
Van den Bossche Jolien,
Stein Barbara,
De Rycke kim,
Deschepper Caroline,
Hazes Katja,
Peeters Renke,
Couttenye Marie-Madeleine,
Van De Walle Katrien,
Roelant Ella,
Maes Sabine,
Vanden Bossche Stephanie,
Dekeyzer Sven,
Huizing Manon,
Caluwaert Kim,
Nijs Griet,
Cools Nathalie,
Verlooy Joris,
Norga Koen,
Verhulst Stijn,
Anguille Sebastien,
Berneman Zwi,
Lion Eva
Abstract
Introduction
Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) and paediatric high-grade
glioma (pHGG) are aggressive glial tumours, for which conventional
treatment modalities fall short. Dendritic cell (DC)-based immunotherapy
is being investigated as a promising and safe adjuvant therapy. The
Wilms’ tumour protein (WT1) is a potent target for this type of
antigen-specific immunotherapy and is overexpressed in DIPG and pHGG.
Based on this, we designed a non-randomised phase I/II trial, assessing
the feasibility and safety ofWT1mRNA-loaded
DC (WT1/DC) immunotherapy in combination with conventional treatment in
pHGG and DIPG.
Methods and analysis
10 paediatric patients with newly diagnosed or pretreated HGG or
DIPG were treated according to the trial protocol. The trial protocol
consists of leukapheresis of mononuclear cells, the manufacturing of
autologous WT1/DC vaccines and the combination of WT1/DC-vaccine
immunotherapy with conventional antiglioma treatment. In newly diagnosed
patients, this comprises chemoradiation (oral temozolomide
90 mg/m2daily+radiotherapy 54 Gy in 1.8 Gy
fractions) followed by three induction WT1/DC vaccines
(8–10×106cells/vaccine) given on a weekly basis
and a chemoimmunotherapy booster phase consisting of six 28-day cycles
of oral temozolomide (150–200 mg/m2on days 1–5) and
a WT1/DC vaccine on day 21. In pretreated patients, the induction and
booster phase are combined with best possible antiglioma treatment at
hand. Primary objectives are to assess the feasibility of the production
of mRNA-electroporated WT1/DC vaccines in this patient population and to
assess the safety and feasibility of combining conventional antiglioma
treatment with the proposed immunotherapy. Secondary objectives are to
investigate in vivo immunogenicity of WT1/DC vaccination and to assess
disease-specific and general quality of life.
Ethics and dissemination
The ethics committee of the Antwerp University Hospital and the
University of Antwerp granted ethics approval. Results of the clinical
trial will be shared through publication in a peer-reviewed journal and
presentations at conferences.
Trial registration number
NCT04911621
Funder
HEBA fund
cellular therapy
fund
UZA foundation
Methusalem financing program of the
Flemish Government
Stichting Semmy
Kom
op tegen Kanker
Olivia Hendrickx Research
Fund
national cancer plan
Belgium