A pilot study of galunisertib (LY2157299) plus stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) in advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)

Abstract only TPS528 Background: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a common and lethal malignancy with few effective treatment options. Inherently aggressive disease biology combined with the immunosuppressive hepatic microenvironment creates a unique therapeutic challenge. TGF-β, the strongest know...

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Published inJournal of clinical oncology Vol. 36; no. 4_suppl; p. TPS528
Main Authors Reiss, Kim Anna, Ben-Josef, Edgar, Damjanov, Nevena, Hoteit, Maarouf, O'Hara, Mark H., Karasic, Thomas Benjamin, Teitelbaum, Ursina R., Schneider, Charles, O'Dwyer, Peter J., Carpenter, Erica L., Mick, Rosemarie, Vonderheide, Robert H.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.02.2018
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Summary:Abstract only TPS528 Background: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a common and lethal malignancy with few effective treatment options. Inherently aggressive disease biology combined with the immunosuppressive hepatic microenvironment creates a unique therapeutic challenge. TGF-β, the strongest known immunosuppressive cytokine [1, 2], modulates the hepatic immune response to various antigens and to ionizing radiation [3, 4]. TGF-β is constitutively released by liver cells and plays a key role in the early and late pathogenesis of HCC [5-7] by dampening the local T-cell response to the oncogenic hepatitis B and –C viruses [4, 8-11]. TGF-β is activated by ionizing radiation, where it blocks the effector T-cell response to cellular destruction and the release of tumor-specific antigens [4]. Preclinical data demonstrate that neutralizing TGF-β during radiation therapy effectively generates a CD8+ T-cell response to multiple endogenous tumor antigens [4], thereby generating an in-situ vaccine against a tumor [12-17]. We hypothesize that the combination of TGF-β receptor inhibition plus radiation therapy will produce a potent and clinically effective antitumor immune response against HCC. Methods: We have enrolled 9 of 15 planned patients on study NCT02906397. Eligibility criteria include inoperable HCC, Childs Pugh score of ≤7, and either failure of or refusal to take sorafenib. Patients must be 4 weeks from prior therapy and may not be taking immunosuppressants. Patients with major cardiac disease or abnormalities or a predisposition toward aneurysm development are excluded. Patients receive galunisertib on days 1-14 of 28 day cycles. SBRT will be delivered in a single fraction of 18 Gy between days 15-28 of C1. Pre-treatment and on-treatment biopsies are obtained, as well as serial blood collections for circulating tumor material. Immunologic evaluation will include TCR deep sequencing to track T-cell receptor clones, analysis of serum inflammatory cytokines, analysis of myeloid and B cell activation, multiplex flow cytometry of PBMCs to measure percentages and absolute counts of T-cell subsets and tissue assessment of immune markers. Peripheral and tissue levels of TGF-β will be assessed. Clinical trial information: NCT02906397.
ISSN:0732-183X
1527-7755
DOI:10.1200/JCO.2018.36.4_suppl.TPS528