Despite the recent notable advances in the treatment of advanced melanoma with application of
growing immunotherapies, patterns of response and factors resulting in treatment failure are
poorly understood. Moreover, the application of these therapeutics has been limited in the
neoadjuvant setting, particularly in earlier stage disease, even though this strategy has
improved tolerance and efficacy with other modalities of therapy in other cancer types.
Survival remains significantly poorer for thicker and ulcerated lesions with T3b and T4
lesions demonstrating less than 50% survival at 5 years independent of other prognostic
indicators. Oncolytic viral therapies (OVT) stimulate or suppress the immune system in
different ways to stop cancer cells from growing and intra-lesional OVT has demonstrated
comparable efficacy and durability with greater tolerability than most effective systemic
therapy. Talimogene laherparepvec (T-VEC) is the only phase III approved intra-lesional
therapy in melanoma and has demonstrated significantly improved overall response rate (64%)
and bystander effect (34% in uninjected lesions) in the therapeutic setting for advanced
disease.
The investigators propose an open-label, Phase 2 study of talimogene laherparepvec (T-VEC),
in the neoadjuvant setting for patients with high-risk, resectable primary and cutaneous
melanoma prior to definitive excision. The central hypothesis of this proposal is that
neoadjuvant intra-lesional therapy with T-VEC in high risk early stage melanoma will
effectively treat local and subclinical distant disease by enhanced immune recognition,
immunomodulation of the nodal basin, and still allow for standard of care surgery. The
primary aim of this study will be to evaluate for histologic response of melanoma with
secondary aim to determine changes in immune response and draining sentinel nodes as well as
relationship of immune phenotype to response rate, stage and nodal burden. The investigators
plan for thorough exploratory analysis of genetic and microenvironmental changes to identify
actionable targets in incomplete as well as evaluation of changes in sentinel burden and
subsequent rates of locoregional disease control, recurrence-free survival and overall
survival in long term follow up. The investigators predict that histologic clearance of the
primary tumor in the surgical specimen will be associated with improved RFS.
In summary, the goal of this project is to conduct a phase II study to evaluate efficacy of
Talimogene laherparepvec in the neoadjuvant setting for primary invasive melanoma in effort
to improve currently poor outcomes for these tumors. This strategy has not yet been explored
in early phase disease despite dramatic results seen with neoadjuvant therapeutics in other
cancer types and recent clinical studies demonstrating efficacy of this approach in advanced
resectable melanoma. Our ability to predict non-responder from responder to immunotherapeutic
agents such as T-VEC is not yet defined and the risk of universal exposure to these systemic
agents may outweigh the hypothesized benefit given the potential for immune-mediated toxicity
as well as associated costs. More importantly, mechanistic dissection of pathways and
molecular/immunological signatures of response and resistance offer the promise of a more
rational and targeted selection of immunotherapy to maximize benefits and minimize risks.
This study would be first in kind to target high earlier stage melanoma in the neoadjuvant
setting with a less toxic intra-tumoral immunotherapy with key correlative endpoints
regarding immune mechanisms of response.
If you are confirmed eligible after full screening, you will be required to understand and sign the informed consent if you decide to enroll in the study. Once enrolled you may be asked to make scheduled visits over a period of time.
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