A Phase 2 Study of S-588410 Maintenance Monotherapy for Platinum-Treated Advanced or Metastatic Urothelial Carcinoma
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Background: Effective maintenance therapy for urothelial carcinoma (UC) is needed to delay progression after first-line chemotherapy.
Objective: To evaluate S-588410, a cancer peptide vaccine containing five human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A24:02-restricted epitope peptides derived from five cancer-testis antigens (DEPDC1, MPHOSPH1, URLC10, CDCA1, and KOC1) in chemotherapy-treated, clinically stable patients with advanced or metastatic UC.
Materials And Methods: This open-label, international, phase 2 trial enrolled patients with UC who had completed≥4 cycles of first-line platinum-containing chemotherapy without disease progression. Forty-five HLA-A24:02-positive patients received subcutaneous injections of S-588410 (Montanide ISA 51 VG with 1 mg/mL of each peptide) weekly for 12 weeks then once every 2 weeks thereafter for up to 24 months. Thirty-six HLA-A24:02-negative patients did not receive S-588410 (observation group). The primary endpoint was the rate of cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) induction against≥1 of the peptides at 12 weeks.
Results: The CTL induction rate in the S-588410 group was 93.3% ( < 0.0001, one-sided binomial test with a rate of≤50% as the null hypothesis). The antitumor response rate was 8.9% in the S-588410 group and 0% in the observation group; median progression-free survival was 18.1 versus 12.5 weeks and median overall survival was 71.0 versus 99.0 weeks, respectively. The most frequent treatment-emergent adverse event was injection-site reactions (47 events, grades 1-3) reported in 93.3% ( = 42/45) of participants.
Conclusions: S-588410 demonstrated a high CTL induction rate, acceptable safety profile, and modest clinical response, as maintenance therapy in participants with advanced or metastatic UC who had received first-line platinum-based chemotherapy (EudraCT 2013-005274-22).
Makino T, Miyata H, Yasuda T, Kitagawa Y, Muro K, Park J Esophagus. 2024; 21(4):447-455.
PMID: 38990441 PMC: 11405444. DOI: 10.1007/s10388-024-01072-w.