A Phase II Trial of Ipilimumab and Nivolumab for the Treatment of Rare Cancers

PHASE2CompletedINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

120

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

August 22, 2017

Primary Completion Date

April 27, 2020

Study Completion Date

December 12, 2023

Conditions
Gastrointestinal CancerNeuroendocrine TumoursMalignant Female Reproductive System Neoplasm
Interventions
DRUG

Ipilimumab

CTLA-4 (cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4) is a key regulator of T cell activity. Ipilimumab is a CTLA-4 immune checkpoint inhibitor that blocks T-cell inhibitory signals induced by the CTLA-4 pathway, increasing the number of tumor reactive T effector cells which mobilize to mount a direct T-cell immune attack against tumor cells. CTLA-4 blockade can also reduce T regulatory cell function, which may lead to an increase in anti-tumor immune response.

DRUG

Nivolumab

A fully human immunoglobulin (Ig) G4 monoclonal antibody directed against the negative immunoregulatory human cell surface receptor programmed cell death-1 (PD-1,PCD-1) with immune checkpoint inhibitory and antineoplastic activities. Nivolumab binds to and blocks the activation of PD-1, an Ig superfamily transmembrane protein, by its ligands programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1), overexpressed on certain cancer cells, and programmed cell death ligand 2 (PD-L2), which is primarily expressed on APCs (antigen presenting cells). This results in the activation of T-cells and cell-mediated immune responses against tumor cells or pathogens. Activated PD-1 negatively regulates T-cell activation and and plays a key role in in tumor evasion from host immunity.

Trial Locations (5)

2145

Blacktown Hospital, Sydney

2640

Border Medical Oncology Unit, Albury

3000

Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne

3078

Austin Health, Heidelberg

3168

Monash Health, Clayton

Sponsors

Collaborators (1)

All Listed Sponsors
collaborator

Bristol-Myers Squibb

INDUSTRY

lead

Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute

OTHER

NCT02923934 - A Phase II Trial of Ipilimumab and Nivolumab for the Treatment of Rare Cancers | Biotech Hunter | Biotech Hunter