A Phase II Window of Opportunity in Preserving Laryngeal Function (WOLF) Trial
Summary
This trial will study the safety and tolerability and disease survival rates in adult patients with recurrent/metastatic (R/M) HNSCC when treated with carboplatin or cisplatin, paclitaxel, and toripalimab.
Detailed description
Currently, for patients with locally advanced laryngeal or hypopharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), there is the option of total laryngectomy (TL) followed by adjuvant pathology driven therapy (RT or CRT) or an organ preservation approach. Total laryngectomy is a particularly morbid surgery, leaving a patient breathing through the neck for the rest of their life. In recent years however, upfront total laryngectomy with adjuvant RT has been in focus to growing concern of reduced overall survival rates in advanced laryngeal and hypopharyngeal SCC, particularly in patients with T4 disease. As such, upfront TL with adjuvant RT or CRT is typical, with organ preservation protocols more controversial, for T4 LSCC specifically. This trial provides neoadjuvant (chemo)immunotherapy (induction regimen of platinum (carboplatin or cisplatin), paclitaxel, and toripalimab) allowing for a novel approach to patient bioselection for the treatment of laryngeal cancer. Toripalimab is approved in combination with cisplatin and gemcitabine for the first-line treatment of patients with recurrent and/or metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma and has shown to significantly improved PFS and OS when combined with cisplatin and gemcitabine. Patients who show response to neoadjuvant therapy in laryngeal cancer have been shown to have 1) a better survival than patients who do not respond and 2) respond better to nonsurgical therapy. The addition of immunotherapy to chemotherapy has the potential to improve the response rate to neoadjuvant therapy, decrease the number of patients who require total laryngectomy as their primary treatment, and to improve the survival of patients with this highly morbid disease.
Arms & interventions
- DrugToripalimab
A monoclonal antibody (recombinant humanized programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) monoclonal antibody that acts as a checkpoint inhibitor) used for the treatment of melanoma and nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
- DrugCarboplatin
A chemotherapy medication classified as an alkylating agent. It contains the metal platinum, which binds to DNA in cancer cells, preventing their replication and leading to cell death. This mechanism makes it effective against rapidly dividing cells, such as cancer cells.
- DrugCisplatin
\*Can be used in place of carboplatin at the investigator's discretion. A chemotherapy medication classified as an alkylating agent. It contains the metal platinum, which binds to DNA in cancer cells, preventing their replication and leading to cell death. This mechanism makes it effective against rapidly dividing cells, such as cancer cells.
- DrugPaclitaxel
A chemotherapy drug that works by slowing or stopping cancer cell growth.
- RadiationRadiation Therapy
Megavoltage energy photon beam irradiation. Any treatment planning and delivery system that has been credentialed for head and neck intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT). Simultaneous integrated boost and sequential boost techniques (discretion of treating physician). Total doses delivered to each Planning Target Volume (PTV) (in 33-35 fractions): High: 70 Gy, Boost (if applicable): 66 Gy, Intermediate: 60-63 Gy, Elective: 56-57 Gy A sequential boost will consist of treatment of the combined PTVs 25 fractions followed by three sequential cone-downs targeting (Intermediate + Boost + High); (Boost + High); and High. Total doses for the PTVs: High: 70 Gy, Boost (if applicable): 66 Gy, Intermediate: 60 Gy, Elective: 50 Gy.
Outcome measures
Primary
1-Year Disease-free survival (DFS)
Proportion of patients who have not experienced disease recurrence/progression or death from any cause at 1 year from start of treatment. Radiologic (CT or MRI) imaging as well as direct visualization by laryngoscopy will be used to assess disease with recurrence requiring a biopsy to be considered positive.
Time frame: At 1 year
Secondary
Overall Survival (OS)
Time frame: Up to 5 years
Larynx preservation rate
Time frame: Up to 5 years
Endoscopic evaluation of swallowing (FEES)
Time frame: At Baseline, at 9 weeks, at 6 months after start of treatment, up to 1 year
Neck Dissection Impairment Index (NDII)
Time frame: At Baseline, at every (21 day) treatment cycle, up to 1-year ± 14 days
Eligibility criteria
Study locations (1)
UPMC Hillman Cancer
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 15213