Title

Phase 1A/1B Study of PSA/IL-2/GM-CSF Vaccine for Recurrent Prostate Cancer in Hormone Naive and Hormone Independent Patients
A Phase 1A/1B, Two-Stage Study of a PSA/IL-2/GM-CSF Vaccine for the Treatment of PSA Recurrent Prostate Cancer in Hormone-Naive and Hormone-Independent Patients
  • Phase

    Phase 1
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Unknown status
  • Study Participants

    48
This study is investigating the safety and efficacy of a vaccine directed against prostate tumor cells. The researchers are interested in evaluating the safety and tolerability of the vaccine, and the effects of the vaccine on survivability, time to measurable disease, prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level in the blood, and the immune response to the vaccine.

Eligible patients include those with recurrent prostate cancer as shown by elevated levels of PSA, although there is no evidence of tumors that are measurable by imaging studies. In addition, to be eligible patients must have prostate cancer that either has not been treated by hormonal therapy or is not responsive to hormonal therapy.
In Phase 1A, hormone naive and hormone independent patients are enrolled in a 1:1 ratio. All patients receive intradermal injections of the PSA/IL-2/GM-CSF induction vaccine at Weeks 1, 2, 3, 7, 11 and 15.

In Phase 1B, which will be initiated after Phase 1A, will first receive the induction vaccine (PSA/IL-2/GM-CSF) according to the same schedule as patients in Phase 1A. Then, in eligible Phase 1B patients, following the induction vaccine regimen, alternating maintenance vaccination will be administered as follows: at Weeks 23, 31, and 39, IL-2 alone will be administered; at Weeks 27, 35, and 43, the complete vaccine (PSA/IL-2/GM-CSF) will be administered.
Study Started
Apr 30
2012
Primary Completion
Dec 31
2018
Anticipated
Study Completion
Dec 31
2018
Anticipated
Last Update
Sep 10
2018

Biological PSA/IL-2/GM-CSF

In Stage 1 (Phase 1A), patients receive intradermal injections of PSA/IL-2/GM-CSF vaccine at Weeks 1, 2, 3, 7, 11, and 15. In Stage 2 (Phase 1B), patients will receive the same course of vaccine (induction as in Phase 1A; this will be followed in eligible patients by maintenance vaccinations alternating between IL-2 alone at Weeks 23, 31, and 39) and complete vaccine (PSA/IL-2/GM-CSF) at Weeks 27, 35, and 43.

PSA/IL-2/GM-CSF vaccine Experimental

In Stage 1 (Phase 1A), patients receive intradermal injections of PSA/IL-2/GM-CSF vaccine at Weeks 1, 2, 3, 7, 11, and 15. In Stage 2 (Phase 1B), patients will receive the same course of vaccine (induction as in Phase 1A; this will be followed in eligible patients by maintenance vaccinations alternating between IL-2 alone at Weeks 23, 31, and 39) and complete vaccine (PSA/IL-2/GM-CSF) at Weeks 27, 35, and 43.

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Histologically confirmed adenocarcinoma of the prostate
Age greater than18 years
Rising serum PSA levels documented by 3 values over the last 6 months prior to study enrollment. Each value must be greater than 2 weeks from the previous value.
Patients with rising PSA must have had either 1) prior definitive therapy including surgery or radiation therapy (hormone-naïve, defined as hormone-naïve patients and patients who received hormone therapy in the past who currently have total testosterone greater than 50 ng/dL), or 2) hormone suppressive therapy as documented by surgical castration or a serum testosterone value less than 50 ng/dL (hormone-independent). Patients must have completed these therapies for at least 6 months but no longer than 20 years prior to enrollment
PSA value within 4 weeks of starting therapy less than 20 ng/mL for hormone-naïve patients (defined as hormone-naïve patients and patients who received hormone therapy in the past who currently have total testosterone greater than 50 ng/dL) or less than 60 ng/mL for hormone-independent patients.
Patients must have the following laboratory values: ANC greater than 1500/mcL, platelet count greater than 100,000/mcL, hemoglobin greater than 10 g/dL, bilirubin less than 1.5 x upper limits of normal, AST less than 1.5 x upper limits of normal
Patients must have adequate lung function, as defined by oxygen saturation greater than or equal to 90% by pulse oximetry
Patients must have QTc interval less than 450 msec
Patients must have adequate EGFR greater than 30 mL/min per 1.73 m2 (per VA formula and adjusted for gender and race)
Patients with female partners of childbearing potential must use at least one form of Investigator-approved contraception while on-study and for 30 days after their last administration of study investigational therapy. Acceptable birth control options include: a) surgical sterilization (subject and/or subject's partner), b) approved hormonal contraceptives or therapies (such as birth control pills, Depo-Provera, or Lupron Depot), c) barrier methods (such as a condom or diaphragm) used with a spermicide, and d) an intrauterine device (IUD).

Exclusion Criteria:

Presence of documented neuroendocrine differentiation on the original pathology report
Evidence of metastatic disease
Immune compromised patients including but not limited to: systemic immune suppressive medications within 6 weeks of enrolling; HIV-positive and below normal CD4 lymphocytes (less than 500 cells per microliter). Patients must be tested for HIV seropositivity and CD4 lymphocyte count to be eligible for the study
Prior malignancy. Patients with nonmelanoma skin cancer or other cancers with greater than 3 years without evidence of disease recurrence are eligible
Inability to give informed consent
Any condition that, according to the investigator, would make the patient an inappropriate study candidate.
Patients with pulmonary disease limiting daily function or requiring oxygen supplementation
Patients with significant cardiac disease including heart failure that meets New York Heart Association (NYHA) class III and IV definitions, history of myocardial infarction within six months of study entry, uncontrolled dysrhythmias, or QTc greater than or equal to 450 msec
Patients with existing autoimmune disorders (IL-2 and GM-CSF carry a theoretical clinical risk of exacerbating underlying autoimmune disorders)
No Results Posted