Title

GM-CSF as Adjuvant Therapy of Melanoma
Immunologic and Antibody Responses in Patients Receiving GM-CSF, (Leukine, Sargramostim) as Adjuvant Therapy of Stage II (T4), III and IV Melanoma.
  • Phase

    Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Intervention/Treatment

    sargramostim ...
  • Study Participants

    50
This is a pilot study to describe the immunological responses and clinical outcome associated with administration of recombinant human Granulocyte Macrophage Colony Stimulating Factor (GM-CSF) as surgical adjuvant therapy in patients with malignant melanoma who are at high risk for recurrence (Stage II T4, III and IV).
This is a pilot study to describe the immunological responses and clinical outcome associated with administration of recombinant human Granulocyte Macrophage Colony Stimulating Factor (GM-CSF) as surgical adjuvant therapy in patients with malignant melanoma who are at high risk for recurrence (Stage II T4, III and IV). The immunological responses include serum neopterin levels. In a sub-set of study participants, additional immunologic testing will be done, including monocyte cytotoxicity to a melanoma cell line and phenotypic and functional markers of dendritic and T cell activation in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The clinical end points of the study include safety, time to disease recurrence, time to disseminated disease, and survival. Eligible patients are those with high-risk melanoma who are clinically tumor free following surgery. Treatment will consist of GM-CSF at 125 g/m2 once daily (maximum dose 250 g) for 14 days followed by 14 days of rest (28 day cycle) for 1 year. Clinical status will be monitored until death or until the patient has been tumor free for five years, whichever event occurs first. Immunologic responses will be determined pretreatment, at the end of the first 14 days of dosing (Day 15), after the 14-day rest period (Day 29) and at the end of 14 days of dosing in cycles 6 (Day 155) and 13 (Day 351). Clinical outcome will be determined according to patient risk group (ultra-high risk Stage IIIC or IV versus high-risk Stage II T4, Stage IIIA and Stage IIIB). The pilot study will also assess the association of the immunological responses with clinical response and safety by patient risk group.
Study Started
Sep 30
2004
Study Completion
Jul 31
2010
Last Update
Jul 11
2006
Estimate

Drug Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor (GM-CSF)

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Eligible patients will be males or females with histologically proven melanoma. Patients must have Stage II (T4), III, and IV malignant melanoma surgically resected with no clinical evidence of disease by clinical, laboratory criteria or radiologic examination as defined below.
Individuals must be at least 14 years of age.
Pregnant women are not eligible. Men and women will be required to use an effective form of contraception.
Patients requiring corticosteroid therapy or are receiving other forms of immunotherapy are not eligible.
Patients may have received immunotherapy for prior disease. They must have completed therapy at least one month prior to study entry. Patients may not have received prior chemotherapy or therapy with GM-CSF. Patients are permitted to receive adjuvant radiation therapy but these patients will not be selected as part of the sub-set undergoing studies of cellular immunologic responses since the radiation could alter these responses. Based on the reults from one randomized, controlled clinical trial, the LEUKINE product labeling contains the following contraindication: "Due to the potential sensitivity of rapidly dividing hematopoietic progenitor cells, LEUKINE should not be administered simultaneously with cytoxic chemotherapy or radiotherapy or within 24 hours preceding or following chemotherapy or radiotherapy. In one controlled study, patients with small cell lung cancer received LEUKINE and concurrent thoracic radiotherapy and chemotherapy or the identical radiotherapy and chemotherapy without LEUKINE. The patients randomized to LEUKINE had significantly higher incidence of adverse events, including higher mortality and a higher incidence of grade 4 infections and grade 3 or 4 thrombocytopenia.28" Other investigators have reported that CM-CSF can be given safely with concurrent radiation therapy. These contrasting results may be related to differences in the patient populations or intensity and/or location of the site of radiotherapy in the body, among other factors. GM-CSF has been administered safely in combination with radiation therapy for treatment of head and neck cancers29,30 and has been used safely during regimens that combine chemotherapy and radiation therapy.31
Patients must undergo examination for evidence of residual disease, including physical examination, CBC, chemistry panel, CT scan of the chest and abdomen (and pelvis for lower extremity or lower trunk lesions), and single sequence with gadolinium MRI or CT of the brain. A PET scan may be substituted for the CT of the chest and abdomen (and pelvis). These tests must be negative for residual disease before entry into the study.
Administration of the protocol medication must be initiated within 90 days of the definitive surgical excision rendering the patient NED.

Exclusion Criteria:

Patients not meeting Inclusion Criteria described above
No Results Posted